P Prentice Wrote:the god of radiocarbon dating has a lot riding these days. half the reports i read dont even state what the dates were obtained from, what the processes were and what the error factor are etc. its being used badly and most 20th century dates are cobblers anyway. people are still getting dates from odd bits of charcoal and saying they dated a context and other such nonsense. often a useful tool but never the answer
Yep. It annoys me when dates are quoted incorrectly and when important information like sample material is omitted.
However, I see radiocarbon dating and other 'absolute' techniques as the only way forward for creating accurate chronologies. As long as they are used and quoted correctly and the inherent limitations are understood the age of material can be measured.
This age, (often after calibration though), can be quoted as a calendar date. Why not abandon the idea of a 'stone age', 'bronze age' etc as these titles must, by definition, be meaningless to the people around at the time. Isn't it time we advance into a single, coherent and measurable timescale.
No more talk of 'that site is Iron Age.......no it isn't is Roman...no silly that bit of pot is actually Anglo Saxon'. Its time to date sites/objects/activities etc etc. by calendar dates (or some similar time-frame).
No more choosing only the radiocarbon dates that match the 'accepted date ranges' from your typological sequences of say brooches and saying those that don't match are due to 'experimental error' or are because radiocarbon dating is useless.
Dating thing by changes in technology/material culture is silly and routed in the idea that technology and therefore societies only advance.