Results 121 to 130 of about 550 (166)
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Archaeomagnetic Dating on the Great Plains
Plains Anthropologist, 1993Archaeomagnetic dates are given for 41 samples from numerous archaeological sites on the Central, Southern, and High Plains. The archaeomagnetic samples are dated using the U.S. Southwest curve, because no curve exists for the Plains area. Both visual and statistical archaeomagnetic dates are provided, and ' 'modified statistical dates *' are derived ...
Jeffrey L. Eighmy +2 more
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Dating with archaeomagnetic intensities
Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, 1998Abstract Improvements in techniques for determining the archaeomagnetic intensity make the refinement of dates using magnetic intensities a realistic proposition. Some of these techniques are reviewed and their limitations discussed.
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Dating the Hohokam Phase Sequence: An Analysis of Archaeomagnetic Dates
Journal of Field Archaeology, 1989Abstract In the past decade more than 700 archaeomagnetic samples have been collected from the Hohokam area of southern Arizona. Four hundred twenty of the dated archaeomagnetic samples could be assigned to specific phases and phase transitions and this large data set is useful in analyzing the absolute chronology of the Hohokam area.
Jeffrey L. Eighmy, Randall H. McGuire
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Combination of archaeomagnetism and thermoluminescence for precision dating
Quaternary Science Reviews, 1994Abstract Archaeomagnetic dating was applied to two chalk-burning ovens from an early medieval noble-cemetery. Usually this method allows dating by the investigation of the geomagnetic declination and inclination through the thermoremanent magnetisation of baked clay in situ. However, in this case the method resulted in multiple dates since it was not
H. Becker, H.Y. Göksu, D.F. Regulla
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Dating by archaeomagnetic and thermoluminescent methods
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1970Abstract Magnetic measurements on orientated samples from the baked clay walls and floors of pottery kilns, etc., enable the ancient direction of the Earth’s magnetic field to be determined. This direction is recorded at the last firing by the phenomenon of thermoremanent magnetism.
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ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATING: ROXBY, HUMBERSIDE
1990A clay surface thought to have been the floor of a kiln was discovered overlying Roman remains at Roxby in Humberside. Archaeomagnetic dating suggests that the feature was last fired towards the end of the 11th century AD, although the date is in some doubt owing to an anomalous scattering of the declination component of remanent magnetisation in the ...
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Geomagnetism and archaeology. Archaeomagnetic dating
5th Congress of Balkan Geophysical Society, 20096251 Geomagnetism and archaeology. Archaeomagnetic dating M. Kovacheva* (Geophysical Institute - BAS) SUMMARY 5 th Congress of Balkan Geophysical Society — Belgrade Serbia 10 – 16 May 2009The archaeomagnetism covers periods of time in which the remains of human existence are discovered mainly ovens hearts furnaces ceramics as pottery and bricks remains
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ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATING: FLIXBOROUGH, HUMBERSIDE
1990Three clay hearths from a Saxon site near Flixborough in Humberside were sampled for archaeomagnetic dating. Unfortunately, it was not possible to date any of them. In the case of two of the features, post-depositional disturbance was the most likely cause of corruption and, for the third feature, failure was due to the low intensity of remanent ...
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ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATING: THE ROYAL MINT, LONDON
1991A fired clay surface, thought to have been a hearth, was discovered during archaeological excavation at the Royal Mint site in London. Archaeomagnetic dating suggests that the feature was last fired towards the end of the 13th centry AD although, owing to crossovers in the archaeomagnetic calibration curve used, two date ranges in the Roman period must
Linford, P., Linford, N.
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