Obsidian Hydration
Diffusion Laboratory, International Association for Obsidian Studies (IA, Obsidian Hydration Analysis (OHA), Obsidian Hydration Analysis Service (OHAS), Obsidian Hydration Laboratory, Obsidian Hydration Results for Pleasanton Sites, ODDSIMS, A New Method of Dating Hydrated Obsidian , The Obsidian Clock, What is Obsidian Hydration Analysis?
Potassium-Argon Dating
Dating the Destruction of Pompeii, Geochronology and Isotope Geochemistry, Potassium-Argon Dating, Potassium-Argon Dating
Seriation
A Spectral Algorithm for Seriation and the Consecu, Dating Exhibit: Seriation, Seriation exercise Anthropology A103, Tombstone, What Seriation Does?
Archaeology Turns to Superconductivity
From PhysicsWeb, The new technique relies on measuring the magnetic signal from lead, which was widely used in antiquity, in samples that have been cooled to cryogenic temperatures.
Clocks in the Rocks
Radioactive decay processes have proven particularly useful in radioactive dating for geologic processes. Uranium-lead, potassium-argon, and rubidium-strontium dating.
Confirmation of near-absolute dating of east &
Three decades of work by the Aegean Dendrochronology Project (ADP) led by Peter Ian Kuniholm have established a long tree-ring sequence covering much of the Bronze-Iron Age periods of the east Mediterranean
Dating Techniques
An exhibit in the Minnesota State University eMuseum explaining the full range of relative and absolute dating methods used to determine the age of antiquities.
Henri D. Grissino-Mayer' Tree-Ring Site
Images, databases, resourses, bibliography, links.
New Method Determining Age Of Neolithic Artifacts
A UC Irvine archaeological scientist has created a new method for determining the approximate age of many artifacts between 50,000 to 100,000 years old, a period for which other dating methods are less effective.
On The Antiquity Of Pots
From ScienceDaily, the contents of ancient pottery could help archaeologists resolve some longstanding disputes in the world of antiquities, thanks to scientists at Britain's University of Bristol. The researchers have developed the first direct method for dating pottery by examining animal fats preserved inside the ceramic walls.