Results 131 to 140 of about 550 (166)
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ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATING. DRAYTON CURSUS, OXFORDSHIRE

1988
Depositional remanent magnetisation and magnetic susceptibility measurements were made on a column of samples taken from the filling of a Neolithic cursus ditch at Drayton, Oxfordshire. A tentative dating scale was obtained for the alluviation sequence of the Thames valley from about 2000 to 950 cal BP.
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ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATING: FLIXBOROUGH HUMBERSIDE, 1991

1991
The floor of a clay oven from a Saxon site near Flixborough in Humberside was sampled for archaeomagnetic dating. Despite the high magnetisation of the feature, the precision of the derived date range was poor. It was concluded that non-rigid collapse of the oven, since it was last fired, was the most probably cause of this problem.
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ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATING: BURTON DASSETT, WARWICKSHIRE

1990
Six ironstone hearths, from the abandoned Medieval settlement of Burton Dassett in Warwickshire, were sampled for archaeomagnetic dating. Two of the hearths proved to be undatable, appearing not to have acquired any significant thermoremanent magnetisation.
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ARCHAEOMAGNETIC DATING: NORTH CAVE, HUMBERSIDE

1990
A clay feature, thought to be perhaps a hearth or furnace, from a Roman site at North Cave, Humberside, was sampled for archaeomagnatic dating. Howver, owing to its poor preservation, no date could be obtained.
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Archaeomagnetic Dating

American Antiquity, 1992
Thomas C. Windes   +2 more
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Archaeomagnetic dating

2020
Sam Harris, Seren Griffiths
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Archaeomagnetic dating

Physics Education, 2004
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Frilford, Oxfordshire: Archaeomagnetic Dating Report 2002

2002
During excavations by the Oxford University Department of Continuing Education at Frilford in Oxfordshire, a fired clay surface was discovered, amongst remains of Roman date. The feature was a roughly circular area of burnt clay above a limestone substructure, and it is conjectured that it might represent a lime burning area associated with building ...
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