Development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline

<p>Archaeological bones are usually dated by radiocarbon measurement of extracted collagen. However, low collagen content, contamination from the burial environment or museum conservation work have previously lead to inaccurate results, especially for old bones, compromising the ability to rec...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marom-Rotem, A
Other Authors: Hedges, REM
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
_version_ 1826311441713463296
author Marom-Rotem, A
author2 Hedges, REM
author_facet Hedges, REM
Marom-Rotem, A
author_sort Marom-Rotem, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>Archaeological bones are usually dated by radiocarbon measurement of extracted collagen. However, low collagen content, contamination from the burial environment or museum conservation work have previously lead to inaccurate results, especially for old bones, compromising the ability to reconstruct reliable past chronologies. It is reported, for example, that up to 70% of Palaeolithic radiocarbon dates on bones are likely to be underestimates of the real age, blurring the picture of modern human dispersals and Neanderthal extinction.</p><p>In this thesis, a method for isolating and radiocarbon dating the collagen amino acid hydroxyproline is described. Hydroxyproline consists of about 10% of bone collagen but is not found in significant amounts elsewhere in nature. The hydroxyproline dating method uses a mixed-mode (i.e. ion-exchange combined with hydrophobic chemistry), semi preparative HPLC methodology. The amino acids do not require derivatisation, and no organic solvents are used, thereby avoiding addition of carbon. The hypothesis of this thesis is that the hydroxyproline can be used as a bone specific biomarker, improving dating accuracy and making it possible to obtain radiocarbon determinations where previously it has been impossible.</p><p>It was calculated that on average 3.3±1.4μg of contaminant carbon are added to each sample in the process of isolating the hydroxyproline, a low level suitable for 14C dating. It was investigated whether a deliberately contaminated bone and 'naturally' contaminated archaeological bones, yielding erroneous dates when dated using the normal pretreatment method, could be dated accurately using this method. In addition, a hydroxyproline date was obtained for a bone with too little surviving collagen to be dateable by the bulk collagen method. Finally, using the hydroxyproline dating method, the earliest direct ages for the presence of anatomically modern humans on the Russian Plain were obtained. The method proved to be a powerful tool that can help resolve longstanding archaeological questions.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:08:29Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:a96325a1-e23a-4038-9293-6914e0bec076
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T08:08:29Z
publishDate 2012
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:a96325a1-e23a-4038-9293-6914e0bec0762023-11-10T10:52:46ZDevelopment and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyprolineThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:a96325a1-e23a-4038-9293-6914e0bec076ArchaeologyBiochemistryDatingEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2012Marom-Rotem, AHedges, REMMcCullagh, JSO<p>Archaeological bones are usually dated by radiocarbon measurement of extracted collagen. However, low collagen content, contamination from the burial environment or museum conservation work have previously lead to inaccurate results, especially for old bones, compromising the ability to reconstruct reliable past chronologies. It is reported, for example, that up to 70% of Palaeolithic radiocarbon dates on bones are likely to be underestimates of the real age, blurring the picture of modern human dispersals and Neanderthal extinction.</p><p>In this thesis, a method for isolating and radiocarbon dating the collagen amino acid hydroxyproline is described. Hydroxyproline consists of about 10% of bone collagen but is not found in significant amounts elsewhere in nature. The hydroxyproline dating method uses a mixed-mode (i.e. ion-exchange combined with hydrophobic chemistry), semi preparative HPLC methodology. The amino acids do not require derivatisation, and no organic solvents are used, thereby avoiding addition of carbon. The hypothesis of this thesis is that the hydroxyproline can be used as a bone specific biomarker, improving dating accuracy and making it possible to obtain radiocarbon determinations where previously it has been impossible.</p><p>It was calculated that on average 3.3±1.4μg of contaminant carbon are added to each sample in the process of isolating the hydroxyproline, a low level suitable for 14C dating. It was investigated whether a deliberately contaminated bone and 'naturally' contaminated archaeological bones, yielding erroneous dates when dated using the normal pretreatment method, could be dated accurately using this method. In addition, a hydroxyproline date was obtained for a bone with too little surviving collagen to be dateable by the bulk collagen method. Finally, using the hydroxyproline dating method, the earliest direct ages for the presence of anatomically modern humans on the Russian Plain were obtained. The method proved to be a powerful tool that can help resolve longstanding archaeological questions.</p>
spellingShingle Archaeology
Biochemistry
Dating
Marom-Rotem, A
Development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline
title Development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline
title_full Development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline
title_fullStr Development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline
title_full_unstemmed Development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline
title_short Development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline
title_sort development and application of an analytical method for radiocarbon dating bones using the amino acid hydroxyproline
topic Archaeology
Biochemistry
Dating
work_keys_str_mv AT maromrotema developmentandapplicationofananalyticalmethodforradiocarbondatingbonesusingtheaminoacidhydroxyproline