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Single-year radiocarbon dating anchors Viking Age trade cycles in time

Authors :
Bente Philippsen
Claus Feveile
Jesper Olsen
Søren M. Sindbæk
Source :
Phillipsen, B, Feveile, C, Olesen, J & Sindbæk, S M 2021, ' Single-year radiocarbon dating anchors Viking Age trade cycles in time ', Nature, vol. 601, pp. 392-396 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04240-5, Philippsen, B, Feveile, C, Olsen, J & Sindbæk, S M 2022, ' Single-year radiocarbon dating anchors Viking Age trade cycles in time ', Nature, vol. 601, no. 7893, pp. 392-396 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04240-5
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Recent discoveries of rapid changes in the atmospheric 14C concentration linked to solar particle events have spurred the construction of new radiocarbon annual calibration datasets [1–13]. With these datasets, radiocarbon dating becomes relevant for urban sites, which require dates at higher resolution than previous calibration datasets could offer. Here we use the single-year radiocarbon calibration curves to anchor the archaeological stratigraphy of the beginning of the Viking Age in time. We present absolutely dated evidence for artefact finds charting the expansion of long-distance trade from as far away as Arctic Norway and the Middle East, which we linked to the beginning of the Viking Age at ad 790 ± 10. The methods developed here enable human interactions and cultural, climatic and environmental changes to be compared in archaeological stratigraphies worldwide. Recent discoveries of rapid changes in the atmospheric 14C concentration linked to solar particle events have spurred the construction of new radiocarbon annual calibration datasets 1–13. With these datasets, radiocarbon dating becomes relevant for urban sites, which require dates at higher resolution than previous calibration datasets could offer. Here we use a single-year radiocarbon calibration curve to anchor the archaeological stratigraphy of a Viking Age trade centre in time. We present absolutely dated evidence for artefact finds charting the expansion of long-distance trade from as far away as Arctic Norway and the Middle East, which we linked to the beginning of the Viking Age at ad 790 ± 10. The methods developed here enable human interactions and cultural, climatic and environmental changes to be compared in archaeological stratigraphies worldwide.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Phillipsen, B, Feveile, C, Olesen, J & Sindbæk, S M 2021, ' Single-year radiocarbon dating anchors Viking Age trade cycles in time ', Nature, vol. 601, pp. 392-396 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04240-5, Philippsen, B, Feveile, C, Olsen, J & Sindbæk, S M 2022, ' Single-year radiocarbon dating anchors Viking Age trade cycles in time ', Nature, vol. 601, no. 7893, pp. 392-396 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04240-5
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....470ee1d6e3e7e712dff8d8d144ccdcaa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04240-5