The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites

The paper is aimed at the analysis of the ‘old wood’ effect in radiocarbon chronology of iron smelting complexes of South Siberia. The production sites are here set outside the settlements, and radiocarbon dating remains the only means of their chronological attribution. With the example of Kuyahtan...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zaitceva O.V., Vodyasov E.V.
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Tyumen Scientific Centre SB RA 2023-03-01
Series:Вестник археологии, антропологии и этнографии
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ipdn.ru/_private/a60/81-90.pdf
_version_ 1797870319463038976
author Zaitceva O.V.
Vodyasov E.V.
author_facet Zaitceva O.V.
Vodyasov E.V.
author_sort Zaitceva O.V.
collection DOAJ
description The paper is aimed at the analysis of the ‘old wood’ effect in radiocarbon chronology of iron smelting complexes of South Siberia. The production sites are here set outside the settlements, and radiocarbon dating remains the only means of their chronological attribution. With the example of Kuyahtanar metallurgical site in the Mountain Altai, we show that the range of a series of radiocarbon dates obtained for the same iron-smelting furnaces can span a thousand years. It has been established that such a chronological range can be explained by the use of wood from long-lived tree species for charcoal production and the resulting significant apparent age due to the ‘old wood’ effect. The essence of the effect consists in that as a tree grows, its inner annual rings die out and stop exchanging carbon with the environment, while the tree is still alive. Therefore, the pith of a longlived tree is much older than its outer rings, and radiocarbon analysis determines not the age of the archaeological object, or time when the tree was cut, but the date of the death of that part of the tree which was sampled for the dating. Methodological recommendations have been drawn up capable of minimizing the impact of the ‘old wood’ effect in the dating of iron metallurgy sites. During the sampling, it is recommended to collect fragments of charcoal from the tree outer rings. In a case, where this is not possible, it is necessary to obtain a series of at least three dates for one site. In such a series, the latest of the three dates will be the closest to the age of the archaeological object. It is also necessary to determine the tree species used for burning the charcoal for smelting. After the tree species is identified, it becomes possible to infer its average and maximum life expectancy in the specific natural and climatic conditions, and, consequently, possible average and maximum impact of the ‘old wood’ effect. Since in the case of dating metallurgical sites the impact of the ‘old wood’ effect is virtually unavoidable, it is suggested that, in the future, the chronology of the complexes radiocarbon dated with a single sample of charcoal is revisited.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T00:25:27Z
format Article
id doaj.art-7bf87de20e314841a76bca0342cc15a5
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1811-7465
2071-0437
language Russian
last_indexed 2024-04-10T00:25:27Z
publishDate 2023-03-01
publisher Tyumen Scientific Centre SB RA
record_format Article
series Вестник археологии, антропологии и этнографии
spelling doaj.art-7bf87de20e314841a76bca0342cc15a52023-03-15T10:02:44ZrusTyumen Scientific Centre SB RAВестник археологии, антропологии и этнографии1811-74652071-04372023-03-011(60)819010.20874/2071-0437-2023-60-1-7The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites Zaitceva O.V.0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4590-1238 Vodyasov E.V. 1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2277-2274Tomsk State University Tomsk State UniversityThe paper is aimed at the analysis of the ‘old wood’ effect in radiocarbon chronology of iron smelting complexes of South Siberia. The production sites are here set outside the settlements, and radiocarbon dating remains the only means of their chronological attribution. With the example of Kuyahtanar metallurgical site in the Mountain Altai, we show that the range of a series of radiocarbon dates obtained for the same iron-smelting furnaces can span a thousand years. It has been established that such a chronological range can be explained by the use of wood from long-lived tree species for charcoal production and the resulting significant apparent age due to the ‘old wood’ effect. The essence of the effect consists in that as a tree grows, its inner annual rings die out and stop exchanging carbon with the environment, while the tree is still alive. Therefore, the pith of a longlived tree is much older than its outer rings, and radiocarbon analysis determines not the age of the archaeological object, or time when the tree was cut, but the date of the death of that part of the tree which was sampled for the dating. Methodological recommendations have been drawn up capable of minimizing the impact of the ‘old wood’ effect in the dating of iron metallurgy sites. During the sampling, it is recommended to collect fragments of charcoal from the tree outer rings. In a case, where this is not possible, it is necessary to obtain a series of at least three dates for one site. In such a series, the latest of the three dates will be the closest to the age of the archaeological object. It is also necessary to determine the tree species used for burning the charcoal for smelting. After the tree species is identified, it becomes possible to infer its average and maximum life expectancy in the specific natural and climatic conditions, and, consequently, possible average and maximum impact of the ‘old wood’ effect. Since in the case of dating metallurgical sites the impact of the ‘old wood’ effect is virtually unavoidable, it is suggested that, in the future, the chronology of the complexes radiocarbon dated with a single sample of charcoal is revisited.http://ipdn.ru/_private/a60/81-90.pdfradiocarbon datingiron metallurgy“old wood” effect.
spellingShingle Zaitceva O.V.
Vodyasov E.V.
The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites
Вестник археологии, антропологии и этнографии
radiocarbon dating
iron metallurgy
“old wood” effect.
title The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites
title_full The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites
title_fullStr The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites
title_full_unstemmed The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites
title_short The ‘old wood’ effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites
title_sort old wood effect and problems of dating iron smelting sites
topic radiocarbon dating
iron metallurgy
“old wood” effect.
url http://ipdn.ru/_private/a60/81-90.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT zaitcevaov theoldwoodeffectandproblemsofdatingironsmeltingsites
AT vodyasovev theoldwoodeffectandproblemsofdatingironsmeltingsites
AT zaitcevaov oldwoodeffectandproblemsofdatingironsmeltingsites
AT vodyasovev oldwoodeffectandproblemsofdatingironsmeltingsites