Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia

If ancient carbon is incorporated into lakes and rivers, it can be transferred along the foodchain where it can cause radiocarbon dates to appear erroneously old. This effect is known as the 14C freshwater reservoir effect (FRE), and causes particular problems when dating human remains. Several stud...

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Main Authors: Wood, Rachel, Higham, Thomas F. G., Buzilhova, A., Suvorov, A., Heinemeier, J., Olsen, J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: University of Arizona 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1885/74300
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spelling ftanucanberra:oai:digitalcollections.anu.edu.au:1885/74300 2023-05-15T17:46:03+02:00 Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia Wood, Rachel Higham, Thomas F. G. Buzilhova, A. Suvorov, A. Heinemeier, J. Olsen, J. 2015-12-13T22:28:39Z http://hdl.handle.net/1885/74300 unknown University of Arizona 0033-8222 http://hdl.handle.net/1885/74300 Radiocarbon Journal article 2015 ftanucanberra 2015-12-28T23:36:09Z If ancient carbon is incorporated into lakes and rivers, it can be transferred along the foodchain where it can cause radiocarbon dates to appear erroneously old. This effect is known as the 14C freshwater reservoir effect (FRE), and causes particular problems when dating human remains. Several studies have attempted to use carbon and/or nitrogen stable isotopes to predict the size of the FRE, with mixed success. We have examined whether the FRE at the Mesolithic-Neolithic burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia, is correlated with these stable isotope systems. To assess the size of the FRE, 9 pairs of human bone and burial goods were dated, such as spears and pendants made of herbivore bone. In addition, further human and faunal bones were analyzed for carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes. Although these stable isotopes suggest that freshwater resources dominated the protein intake of those buried at Minino, no relationship between stable isotopes and the FRE was found. Instead, we found that the FRE was relatively consistent at 490 ± 80 14C yr. With caution, this can be subtracted from burials at Minino to provide a low-resolution chronology for the burial ground. We demonstrate that it is not possible to assume that a relationship exists between stable isotopes and 14C, and each population thought to be affected by a FRE must be examined individually. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northwest Russia Australian National University: ANU Digital Collections Minino ENVELOPE(35.300,35.300,63.783,63.783)
institution Open Polar
collection Australian National University: ANU Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftanucanberra
language unknown
description If ancient carbon is incorporated into lakes and rivers, it can be transferred along the foodchain where it can cause radiocarbon dates to appear erroneously old. This effect is known as the 14C freshwater reservoir effect (FRE), and causes particular problems when dating human remains. Several studies have attempted to use carbon and/or nitrogen stable isotopes to predict the size of the FRE, with mixed success. We have examined whether the FRE at the Mesolithic-Neolithic burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia, is correlated with these stable isotope systems. To assess the size of the FRE, 9 pairs of human bone and burial goods were dated, such as spears and pendants made of herbivore bone. In addition, further human and faunal bones were analyzed for carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes. Although these stable isotopes suggest that freshwater resources dominated the protein intake of those buried at Minino, no relationship between stable isotopes and the FRE was found. Instead, we found that the FRE was relatively consistent at 490 ± 80 14C yr. With caution, this can be subtracted from burials at Minino to provide a low-resolution chronology for the burial ground. We demonstrate that it is not possible to assume that a relationship exists between stable isotopes and 14C, and each population thought to be affected by a FRE must be examined individually.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wood, Rachel
Higham, Thomas F. G.
Buzilhova, A.
Suvorov, A.
Heinemeier, J.
Olsen, J.
spellingShingle Wood, Rachel
Higham, Thomas F. G.
Buzilhova, A.
Suvorov, A.
Heinemeier, J.
Olsen, J.
Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia
author_facet Wood, Rachel
Higham, Thomas F. G.
Buzilhova, A.
Suvorov, A.
Heinemeier, J.
Olsen, J.
author_sort Wood, Rachel
title Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia
title_short Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia
title_full Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia
title_fullStr Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia
title_full_unstemmed Freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of Minino, northwest Russia
title_sort freshwater radiocarbon reservoir effects at the burial ground of minino, northwest russia
publisher University of Arizona
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1885/74300
long_lat ENVELOPE(35.300,35.300,63.783,63.783)
geographic Minino
geographic_facet Minino
genre Northwest Russia
genre_facet Northwest Russia
op_source Radiocarbon
op_relation 0033-8222
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/74300
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