Title: Archaeological Sciences
1Archaeological Sciences
- An Introduction
- Created By Margaret Blome
- U of Arizona IGERT Graduate Student
- 6/11/07
2Archaeology
- The study of past cultures through their material
remains (Arch 101)
3Archaeology
- The study of past cultures through their material
remains (Arch 101) - Scientific study of material remains of past
human life and activities (Encyclopedia
Britannica)
4Archaeology
- The study of past cultures through their material
remains (Arch 101) - Scientific study of material remains of past
human life and activities (Encyclopedia
Britannica) - The recovery and study of material objects, such
as graves, buildings, tools, artworks, and human
remains, to investigate the structure and
behavior of past cultures (Science Dictionary)
5Archaeological Sciences
- The study of human cultures through the recovery,
documentation and analysis of material remains
and environmental data including - architecture, artifacts, biofacts, human remains,
and landscapes (Wikipedia) - The use of the hard sciences to understand
archaeological questions. (Meg)
6Archaeological Sciences
- Absolute Dating
- Radiometric
- 14C
- Uranium series (U/Th)
- K-Ar or Ar-Ar
- Cosmogenic Radionuclides (CRNs)
- 10Be
- 26Al
- 3He
- Luminescence
- OSL Optically Stimulated Luminescence
- TL Thermo Luminescence
- Geoarchaeology
- Landscape reconstruction
- Site formation or destruction processes
- Catastrophic events
- Paleoclimatology
- Reconstructing past climates
- Soil Sciences
- Paleobiology
- Ancient diet and subsistence
- Ancient DNA
- Material Science
- Stone, bone, metal artifacts
7Radiometric Dating Vocabulary
- Isotopes forms of a single element (same
protons) with different numbers of neutrons - Parent the isotope that undergoes nuclear decay
- Daughter the isotope that results from nuclear
decay - Parent/Daughter ratio used in U/Th dating
- Radioactive Decay the process by which an
unstable nucleus loses energy by emitting
radiation. - Process is random on atomic level, but decay rate
is predictable - Half-life the amount of time it takes for half
of an initial quantity of unstable isotopes to
decay.
8Radiometric Dating
- Radiometric Isotopes (Non-stable)
- 14C (Radiocarbon)
- U/Th (Uranium series)
- K/Ar (Potassium-Argon)
238U 234U E,
9Periodic Table of Elements
- Highlighted are the main elements used in dating
10Essential InformationThe isotopes used in
archaeology
Isotope system ½ Life Parent Daughter
Radiocarbon 5730 yrs 14C (Carbon) 14N (Nitrogen)
Uranium series 4.5 billion yrs 244,000 yrs 238U 234U 234U 230Th
K-Ar or Ar-Ar 1.3 billion yrs 40K 40Ar
11Radiocarbon dating in depth
- Why is 14C useful?
- Production 14C is created from 14N in the
atmosphere due to cosmic ray bombardment - Absorption, into all living things
- Decay Beginning of the radiocarbon clock at
death
- Problems
- Production rate varies over time
- Calibration Required
- Difference between 14C age on land and in the
ocean Reservoir Effect - Can only date objects containing carbon.
- Trees/wood/charcoal
- Plants/seeds
- Bone/hair/teeth
- Shell/coral
12Carbon 14 production in atmosphere
147N 10n 146C 11p
Carbon 14 absorption into living things
1314C Absorption into carbon-based life
Coral living
ancient/fossil
14Plants, Trees Charcoal
15People Animals!
16A Current amount of 14CA0 Initial amount of
14C (amount absorbed at time of death)e
Mathematical constant (2.71828)? Constant
(ln(2) / half life)t Time
A/A0 e-?t
17Measurement of 14C using AMS (Accelerator Mass
Spectrometry)
Images from UA physics website
Sample pretreatment in UA laboratory
18Sample pretreatment methods
- Depends on specific material to be dated
- Charcoal
- Plant material
- Soil
- All treated with ABA process
- Acid, Base, Acid baths
- Pretreatment also depends on analytical method to
be used - AMS measurement needs less than 1 gram of sample
- Conventional method requires more sample
19Measurement of 14C
- Conventional Method
- Requires more sample
- Takes a longer time
- Cheaper!
- Process
- Measures emission of beta particles from sample
over time - Beta particles are emitted during decay
- Accelerator Mass Spectrometer (AMS)
- Requires less sample
- Faster results!
- More expensive
- Process
- Ionize carbon sample
- Puts sample into gaseous state
- Magnets bend flow of sample and separates
according to mass and charge - Actually sorts and counts isotopes
20Uranium series dating intro
- Dating range for U/Th system
- Up to 450,000 years
- Fills the gap between K/Ar and radiocarbon dating
- Range for 234U/238U
- 10,000 2 million yrs
- Why this works?
- Uranium substitutes for Calcium in calcite
- Materials that can be dated with this system
- Cave deposits
- Coral
- CaCO3 (Calcite)
- Sometimes this includes bone!
21(No Transcript)
22Coral living
ancient/fossil
23K-Ar dating in depth
- How it works
- Used in locations with periodic volcanic activity
- Absolutely date layers of ash that bound
stratigraphic layer with archaeological remains - Dates from 500,000 to millions of years
24K-Ar datable materials
25Essential Isotope InformationReview
Isotope system ½ Life Date Range from to Date Range from to
14C 5730 yrs 50,000 years Present
234U/238U 234U/230Th 4.5 billion yrs 244,000 yrs 2 million yrs 450,000 yrs 10,000 yrs present
K-Ar 1.3 billion yrs Millions of yrs 500,000 yrs
26Non radiometric dating methods
- Luminescence TL and OSL
- Can be used on burnt flint and quartz sediment
- Cosmogenic Radionuclides (CRNs)
- Accumulated amount can be used to date exposed
rock surfaces
27Quartz Sand
Flint tools
Bare Rock
Sand Dune