Tree rings reveal ancient solar storms, helping scientists predict and prepare for future events that could disrupt ...
New research by Flinders University researchers, conducted in partnership with the River Murray and Mallee Aboriginal ...
Radiocarbon-based analyses can now accomplish sufficient resolution for meaningful independent estimates of Inka chronology, however, and it is incumbent upon archaeologists to develop such appraisals ...
Andrew Smith, Dr. Quan Hua and Dr. Bin Yang have contributed to a paper that elucidates how in situ cosmogenic radiocarbon (14 C) is produced, retained and lost in the top layer of compacting snow ...
SEVERAL articles 1–3 have described efforts to reconcile radiocarbon ages with “true ages”. The principle behind these procedures lies in the determination of a radiocarbon age and its ...
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An ancient burial in Belgium contains bones from five people, spanning 2,500 years. Radiocarbon dating reveals a unique history.
A skeleton buried in a fetal position is actually made of bones from at least five people who lived across a span of 2,500 ...
The monument was first documented in 1583 by the English cartographer John Norden, who wrote, "It is called Arthur's Hall".
Back in the 1970s, when archaeologists excavated a skeleton from an ancient graveyard in Belgium, they thought they had found ...
A skeleton found in a well in 1938 appears to be the exact individual mentioned in a centuries-old text, complicating ...
BBC News reports that excavations at the site of King Arthur’s Hall on Bodmin Moor, which scholars once thought had been ...