A slice of pine from the period covered by single-year calibration data (Stuiver 1993) was selected to serve as part of the quality assurance procedures of the English Heritage radiocarbon dating program, following successful wiggle-matching of 14C measurements from structural 15th century English oak timbers (Hamilton et al. 2007). The timber selected was a roofing element from a house on Jermyn Street, central London, demonstrated by dendrochronology to have been felled in AD 1670. Eighteen single-ring samples were dated by the 14C laboratories at Groningen, Oxford, and SUERC: each labo-ratory was sent a random selection of 6 samples. This approach was intended to mimic the mix of samples and relative ages incorporated into Bayesian chronological models during routine project research. This paper presents the results of this study. © 2009 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona.
CITATION STYLE
Tyers, C., Sidell, J., Van Der Plicht, J., Marshall, P., Cook, G., Ramsey, C. B., & Bayliss, A. (2009). Wiggle-matching using known-age pine from jermyn street, London. In Radiocarbon (Vol. 51, pp. 385–396). University of Arizona. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033822200055788
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