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Topia!: Science: Social Sciences: Archaeology: Topics: Geoarchaeology: Radiocarbon Dating (14)
See Also:
Beta Analytic - Commercial radiocarbon dating laboratory in Miami, Florida, US. Detailed description of methods and services. Radiocarbon Web-Info - Extensive information concerning the radiocarbon dating method from Tom Higham, Radiocarbon Laboratory, University of Waikato, New Zealand. CalPal - The Cologne Radiocarbon Calibration and Paleoclimate Research Package is designed to support research on hominid behavioural response to pleistocene climate change. How Stuff Works: Carbon-14 Dating - Introductory tutorial. Radiocarbon Dating at Queen's University, Belfast - How does radiocarbon dating (14C) work and how is it measured? Answers from the Radiocarbon Dating Service at the School of Archaeology and Palaeoecology. Radiocarbon Dating Services, Radioecology Lab of RCRM, Kiev - Lab in Ukraine offers radiocarbon dating services. Includes description of conventional method and Liquid scintillation counting techniques used. Leibniz-Labor - This laboratory at the University of Kiel provides radiometric dating and studies the use of stable and radioactive isotopes for archaeometry, palaeoclimate research and as tracers in environmental studies. OCR Carbon Dating, Inc. - Oxidizable carbon ratio dating for carbon-based items from 1 year to 35,000 years old. This laboratory in Vermont supplies a mass of information on the process and procedures. Rafter Radiocarbon Laboratory - At the Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences, New Zealand, provides radiocarbon dating services to international scientific, academic, and art/antiquities clients. Beta Analytic Inc. - Professional radiocarbon dating service. The Kilnsea-Boat - The opening paragraphs of an article in Antiquity by Robert Van de Noort et al on the radiocarbon dating of a Bronze Age plank discovered in 1996 on the Yorkshire coast at Kilnsea. Canadian Archaeological Radiocarbon Database (CARD) - Compilation of radiocarbon measurements that indicate the ages of archaeological and vertebrate palaeontological sites in North America. Carbon Clock Could Show the Wrong Time - From PhysicsWeb, Carbon dating is a mainstay of geology and archaeology, but an enormous peak discovered in the amount of carbon-14 in the atmosphere between 45 thousand and 11 thousand years ago casts doubt on the biological carbon cycle that underpins the technique.
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