Challenges in sample processing within radiocarbon dating and their impact in C-14-dates-as-data studies
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Becerra-Valdivia, Lorena
Leal-Cervantes, Rodrigo
Higham, Tom
Wood, Rachel
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Elsevier
Abstract
For decades, researchers have employed sets of radiocarbon dates to reconstruct trends in ancient human populations. The overarching assumption in this analysis is that the frequency of dates is proportional to the
magnitude of past human activity. Thus, the distribution of summed or otherwise summarized dates is used to
extrapolate population density and mobility patterns. There are, however, a number of underlying assumptions
associated with this analysis that workers address to varying degrees and which, if false and not critically
accounted for, will introduce bias, misrepresent the magnitude of activity, and ultimately prove misleading in
archaeological interpretations. In this regard, research has so far mainly focused on correcting for the effects of
time-dependent degradation of archaeological sites and constituent materials, calibration irregularities, and the
efficacy of the statistical methods used. Assumptions directly related to sample processing in radiocarbon dating,
however, are less discussed in ‘
14C-dates-as-data’ analyses. It is, for example, assumed that all carbonaceous
materials will yield sufficient, endogenous carbon for radiocarbon measurement. Yet sample failure in radiocarbon dating is common and contingent on, largely, deterministic factors such as post-depositional environment. Sets of radiocarbon dates analyzed, therefore, represent successful measurements independent of
reliability. In this work, we discuss the biases introduced by challenges in radiocarbon processing and their
impact on 14C-dates-as-data studies
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Journal of Archaeological Science
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2099-12-31
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