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Dating Grimes Graves.

Janet Ambers

Abstract


More radiocarbon analyses have been produced for the Neolithic flint mines of Grimes Graves than for any other site with which the British Museum's Radiocarbon Laboratory has been involved. Despite this heavy concentration of effort, a recent review of these figures concluded that poor sample selection, combined with a lack of sufficient quality assurance procedures, severely limit the use that can be made of this database. To overcome these difficulties, a redating program has been undertaken using a carefully selected subset of the original material. In this paper I discuss the flaws in the original data set, due to both technical and sampling problems; set out ways to avoid similar problems in the future, with particular reference to quality assurance; and discuss the new results and their archaeological implications.

Keywords


flint;Grimes Graves Norfolk;mines;Neolithic;Stone Age;East Anglia;Norfolk England;chemically precipitated rocks;England;errors;archaeology;archaeological sites;isotope ratios;Great Britain;United Kingdom;Holocene;data bases;Europe;Western Europe;Cenozoic;Quaternary;C 14;carbon;dates;isotopes;radioactive isotopes;C 13 C 12;stable isotopes;absolute age;sedimentary rocks

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