Abstract
Collagen-based pretreatment methods for bone yield inconsistent results for those samples where protein preservation is low, as frequently found in bones from the semi-arid zones of Australia and North America. New methods for dealing with low collagen bones are needed, and this paper suggests that the non-collagenous proteins, particularly the blood proteins, may offer advantages for AMS dating because of their better preservation. Amino-acid profiles of collagen and non-collagenous proteins suggest that such differential preservation may be due to physico-chemical differences, and help to explain the poor results from dating low-collagen bones. -Author
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gillespie, R. (1990). Fundamentals of bone degradation chemistry: collagen is not “the way’’.” Radiocarbon, 31(3), 239–246. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200011747
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