Archeologist and TBH Assistant Editor Emily McCuistion wrote the Radiocarbon Dating exhibit. The exhibit is based on Emily’s master’s thesis, The Camel of Time: Radiocarbon Dating the Lower Pecos Canyonlands, which was completed at Texas State University in 2019. TBH Editor Steve Black was Emily's graduate advisor and exhibit editor, and encouraged both thesis and exhibit projects.
Emily McCuistion and Steve Black designed and developed the exhibit for the web, with assistance from Liberal Arts Instructional Technology Services (LAITS) at UT-Austin. TBH Associate Editor Heather Smith (Department of Anthropology, Texas State University) and Raymond Mauldin (Center for Archaeological Research, The University of Texas-San Antonio) reviewed the draft and provided helpful suggestions for improvement. E. Thomas Miller of Kerrville, Texas bequeathed support for this exhibit. Emily's thesis acknowledges many others who helped facilitate her radiocarbon research.
Animations of radiocarbon concepts used in the exhibit are courtesy of Maarten Blaauw, Department of Archaeology and Palaeoecology, School of Natural and Built Environment, Queen's University Belfast. Audio recordings of Willard Libby's 1948 presentation at the Viking Fund Supper Conference are courtesy of the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Inc.
Print Sources
- 2008 Radiocarbon Dating: Revolutions in Understanding. Archaeometry 50(2):249–275.
- 2017 We’re All Cultural Historians Now: Revolutions in Understanding Archaeological Theory and Scientific Dating. Radiocarbon 59(05):1347–1357.
- 2018 The Myths and Realities of Bayesian Chronological Modeling Revealed. American Antiquity 83(02):187–203.
- 1987 The Impact on Archaeology of Radiocarbon Dating by Accelerator Mass Spectrometry [and Discussion]. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 323(1569):23–43.
- 1963 The Early History of Carbon-14. Journal of Chemical Education 40(5):234.
- 2014 A Precise Chronology of Middle to Late Holocene Bison Exploitation in the Far Southern Great Plains. Journal of Texas Archeology and History 1: 94–126.
- 2014 Toward an Improved Archaic Radiocarbon Chronology for Central Texas Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 85: 259–126.
- 1999 Year One: Radiocarbon Dating and American Archaeology, 1947-1948. American Antiquity 64(01):9–32.
- 2019 The Camel of Time: Radiocarbon Dating the Lower Pecos Canyonlands. Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas. Download
- 1977 Discussion Reporting of 14C Data. Radiocarbon 19(03):355–363.
- 2016 MS Excel spreadsheet for δ13C corrections. Download
- 2014 Radiocarbon Dating: An Archaeological Perspective. Left Coast Press. Walnut, California.
- 2017 An Expanded Inventory of Radiocarbon Dates from the Lower Pecos Region of Texas and the Northern Mexican States of Coahuila and Nuevo Leon. Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 88:105–131.
Links
- Radiocarbon Journal Founded in 1959, Radiocarbon is the international journal of record for technical and interpretive articles and date lists relevant to 14C and other radioisotopes and techniques used in archaeological, geophysical, oceanographic, and related dating.
- Canadian Archaeological Radiocarbon Database (CARD) CARD is a compilation of radiocarbon data primarily from archaeological sites in North America, which is continually growing as archeologists submit new data. CARD also includes some samples from paleontological and geological contexts, and is expanding to include Central and South American radiocarbon data.
- NOVA: Radioactive Decay of Carbon-14 In this video excerpt from NOVA: "Hunting the Elements," New York Times technology columnist David Pogue explores how isotopes of carbon can be used to determine the age of once-living matter.
- OxCal The OxCal program provides radiocarbon calibration and analysis of archaeological and environmental chronological information. It is not the only calibration program, but it is one of the most popular programs for calibrating and analyzing radiocarbon data.
- Part I and Part II of a 1979 interview of Willard Libby by Greg Marlowe on 1979 April 12. From the Niels Bohr Library & Archives, American Institute of Physics, College Park, MD USA.
- Maarten Blaauw's radiocarbon animations Radiocarbon animations, including several animations not used in this exhibit, can be viewed here.