The radiocarbon method was developed by a team of scientists led by the late Professor
Willard F. Libby of the University of Chicago in immediate post-WW2 years.
Libby later received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1960.
Today, there are over 130 radiocarbon dating laboratories around the world producing radiocarbon assays for the scientific community. The C14 technique has been and continues to be applied and used in many, many different fields including hydrology, atmospheric science, oceanography, geology, Paleoclimatology, archaeology and biomedicine.
What is Radiocarbon dating
Radiocarbon dating is a method of what is known as “Absolute Dating”. Despite the name, it does not give an absolute date of organic material, but an approximate age, usually within a range of a few years either way. The other method is “Relative Dating” which gives an order of events without giving an exact age. Typically artefact typology or the study of the sequence of the evolution of fossils.
There are three carbon isotopes that occur as part of the Earth's natural processes; these are carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14. The unstable nature of carbon 14 (with a precise half-life that makes it easy to measure) means it is ideal as an absolute dating method. The other two isotopes in comparison are more common than carbon-14 in the atmosphere but increase with the burning of fossil fuels making them less reliable for study. Carbon-14 also increases, but its relative rarity means its increase is negligible. The half-life of the 14C isotope is 5,730 years, adjusted from 5,568 years originally calculated in the 1940s; the upper limit of dating is in the region of 55-60,000 years, after which the amount of 14C is negligible. After this point, other Absolute Dating methods may be used.
Today, the radiocarbon-14 dating method is used extensively in environmental sciences and in human sciences such as archaeology and anthropology. It also has some applications in geology; its importance in dating organic materials cannot be underestimated enough. In 1979, Desmond Clark said of the method “we would still be foundering in a sea of imprecisions sometime bred of inspired guesswork but more often of imaginative speculation”.
Radiocarbon dating may only be used on organic materials. Typically;
Wood and charcoal
Seeds, spores and pollen
Bone, leather, hair, fur, horn and blood residue
Peat, mud and soil
Shells, coral and chitin
Pottery (where there is organic residue)
Wall paintings (as they usually contain organic material such as crushed fruit and insects)
Paper and parchment
The above list is not exhaustive; most organic material is suitable so long as it is of sufficient age and has not mineralised - dinosaur bones are out as they no longer have any carbon left. Stone and metal cannot be dated but pottery may be dated through surviving residue such as food particles or paint that uses organic material.
There are a number of ways to enter into a career in studying radiocarbon dating. Typically, a Master's Degree in chemistry is required because of the extensive lab work. Increasingly though, students are learning about the principles of radiocarbon dates in archaeology, palaeontology and climate science degrees and can combine cross-disciplinary studies.
History of Radiocarbon-14 Dating
The method developed in the 1940's and was a ground-breaking piece of research that would change dating methods forever. A team of researchers led by Willard F. Libby calculated the rate of radioactive decay of the 14C isotope in carbon black powder. As a test, the team took samples of acacia wood from two Egyptian Pharaohs and dated them; the results came back to within what was then a reasonable range: 2800BC +/- 250 years whereas the earlier independent dates (largely the dendrochronology records) were 2625 +/- 75 years. Archaeologists had used Relative Dating methods to calculate their reigns. Though their initial calculations were slightly incorrect thanks to the contaminants of extensive nuclear testing of the age, scientists soon discovered the error and developed methods that were more accurate, including a date of calibration to 1950. This new method was based on gas and liquid scintillation counting and these methods are still used today, having been demonstrated as more accurate than Libby's original method. Willard Libby would receive a Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1960.
The next big step in the radiocarbon dating method would be Accelerated Mass Spectrometry which was developed in the late 1980s and published its first results in 1994. This was a giant leap forward in that it offered far more accurate dates for a far smaller sample. This made destruction of samples a far less delicate issue to researchers, especially on artefacts such as The Shroud of Turin for which accurate dates were now possible without damaging a significant part of the artefact. AMS counts the quantity of 14C in a sample rather than waiting for the isotope to decay; this also means greater accuracy readings for older dates.
How it Works
The 14C isotope is constantly formed in the upper atmosphere thanks to the effects of cosmic rays on nitrogen-14 atoms. It is oxidised quickly and absorbed in great quantities by all living organisms - animal and plant, land and ocean dwelling alike. When an organism dies, it stops absorbing the radioactive isotope and immediately starts decaying. As previously mentioned, the half life of the 14C isotope is 5,730 years, this means that it takes 5,730 years to reach half the radioactivity that the organism had at the point of death, another 5,730 years to reach 25% radioactivity it had at the point of death and so on. Radiocarbon dating is simply a measure of the level of 14C isotope within the organic remains. This is not as clear-cut as it seems as the amount of 14C isotopes in the atmosphere can vary. This is why calibration against objects whose age is known is required.
AMS works slightly differently; it converts the atoms of the sample into fast-moving ions so that they become charged atoms. By applying magnetic and electrical fields, the mass of these ions is measured and the accelerator is used to remove ions that might contaminate the dating. The sample passes through several accelerators in order to remove as many atoms as possible until the 14C and some 12C and 13C pass into the detector. These latter atoms are used as part of the calibration process to measure the relative number of isotopes.
How is a Date Calibrated?
When the half-life was corrected in 1950, the year was taken as a base date from which to calculate all resulting dates. Therefore, any expression of “before present” will mean “before 1950”. It is presumed that the proportion of atmospheric 14C is the same today as it was in 1950 and that the half-life remains the same. If a radioactivity level comes back as half of what would have been expected if the organism had died in 1950, then it is presumed to be 5,730 years before 1950. This does not mean that we have a precise year of 3780BC, it means we then need to calibrate through other methods that will show us how atmospheric concentrations of the 14C isotope has changed most typically through the dendrochronology records (tree ring data). Very old trees such as North American Bristlecone Pine are ideal for constructing long and accurate records of the state of the atmosphere. This allows researchers to account for variation by comparing the known records of 14C levels in the tree record, looking for a tree record that has the same proportion of radiocarbon. The overlapping nature of the tree records means this is the most accurate record we have. There will of course be several possible calendar years within the expected range, which is why radiocarbon dates come with a variation such as +/- 25 years for example.
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