Archaeological Dating: How Well Does it Work?

This video supersedes an earlier video I did on Chronometric Dating in archaeology, updated to reflect the new interface in the Oxcal Radiocarbon software and with a few other improvements. It also focuses on the kinds of events that archaeologists can date, and what errors can occur, but in a realist fashion to counter some people's claim that archaeological dating is simply wrong. Tools like calibration and reservoir corrections make radiocarbon dating - along with a variety of other chronometric tools - invaluable.
You'll find the OxCal software here: c14.arch.ox.ac.uk/
And one of the good alternatives, BCal, here: bcal.shef.ac.uk/
Both have good tutorials and work well online. OxCal is more the "standard" in archaeology, but you might find BCal more user-friendly.
Radiocarbon dating is the most important tool for archaeological chronology of the last 50,000 years or so and is applicable to a wide range of organic materials. However, the interpretation of radiocarbon evidence is not always simple. In this video, I discuss what constitute potentially datable events, how a radiocarbon date might relate to an archaeologically interesting "target event," and how we can conceptualize dating errors that result when the dated event is not really the same as the target event. Critics who want to reject radiometric dating outright (often in favour of Creationist accounts) ignore or misrepresent the complexities of the method. There certainly can be (and are) errors, but it is possible to correct for all but the statistical errors and occasional human errors. Overall, radiometric dating is very effective.
In the last half of the video, I briefly discuss radiocarbon calibration and demonstrate, with some simple examples, the use of Bayesian modelling in OxCal to interpret sets of dates that fall into three distinct periods, and to explore how the events that mark the beginnings or ends of periods relate to other dated events, such as rapid climate events. At the end, I outline some basic good habits in the reporting of radiocarbon evidence.
The following provide more information on radiocarbon dating.
For technical aspects and AMS dating: • Dating - the Radiocarb...
Lecture by Derek Hamilton on Bayesian modelling: • Radiocarbon dating and...
These exercises are still using the old version. I'll replace them as soon as I find updated ones:
OxCal Workbook 1 (no sound): • Exercise 1. OxCal Work...
OxCal Exercise 5.1 - Contiguous Phases (no sound): • Exercise 5.1. OxCal Wo...
And, since stratigraphy is very important in radiocarbon interpretation: • Stratigraphy
Finally, here is some introduction to Bayesian thinking more generally:
• How Bayes Theorem works
• Introduction to Bayesi...
• A visual guide to Baye...
#archaeology #chronology #radiocarbon #dendrochronology #archaeometry

Пікірлер: 7

  • @Eyes_Open
    @Eyes_Open Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this video. Can't wait to share it with the next person who claims that Archaeological dating is unscientific and unreliable. Cheers from the Ottawa valley.

  • @jaybandoesrealestate
    @jaybandoesrealestate Жыл бұрын

    🐐👍💪 great video

  • @joannamclean2722
    @joannamclean272211 ай бұрын

    Thank you! This is so helpful as I start my journey using Oxcal.

  • @thearchaeologistslaborator6591

    @thearchaeologistslaborator6591

    11 ай бұрын

    Glad it was helpful!

  • @nihalgaming1184
    @nihalgaming1184 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you sir am waiting for next video

  • @jaypalsinhjadeja1829
    @jaypalsinhjadeja1829 Жыл бұрын

    Thank You Sir 👌👌

  • @pranays
    @pranays Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the video