Paired measurements of14C/12C and230Th ages from two Hulu Cave stalagmites complete a precise record of atmospheric14C covering the full range of the14C dating method (~54,000 years). Over the last glacial period, atmospheric14C/12C ranges from values similar to modern values to values 1.70 times higher (42,000 to 39,000 years ago). The latter correspond to14C ages 5200 years less than calibrated ages and correlate with the Laschamp geomagnetic excursion followed by Heinrich Stadial 4. Millennial-scale variations are largely attributable to Earth’s magnetic field changes and in part to climate-related changes in the oceanic carbon cycle. A progressive shift to lower14C/12C values between 25,000 and 11,000 years ago is likely related, in part, to progressively increasing ocean ventilation rates.
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Bomb pulse 14C evidence for consistent remodeling rates of cortical femur collagen in middle‐late adulthood
Abstract ObjectivesBomb pulse (BP) radiocarbon (14C) dating methods are used by forensic anthropologists to estimate the year‐of‐death (YOD) of unidentified individuals. Method resolution and accuracy depend on establishing lag times, or the difference between a tissue's BP14C‐derived year and the YOD, of various tissue types from known deceased persons. Bone lag times span many years and are thought to increase with age as a function of slowing remodeling rates. However, remodeling rates for various skeletal elements, bone structures and phases are not well known. Materials and MethodsHere a simple method is used to estimate bone remodeling rates from a compilation of published cortical femur bone collagen BP14C measurements (n = 102). Linear regression models and nonparametric tests are used to detect changes in lag times and remodeling rates with increasing age‐at‐death. ResultsRemodeling rates and lag times of 3.5%/year and 29 years, respectively, are estimated from individuals aged 40–97 years. In contrast to previous work, the analysis yielded modest and negligible changes in remodeling rates and lag times with advancing age. Moreover, statistically significant differences in remodeling rates and lag times were not found between reported females and males. DiscussionImplications for the temporal contexts within an individual's lifetime of biogeochemical data in archaeology and forensic anthropology are discussed, warranting additional BP14C studies of known individuals and integration with histomorphometric analysis.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1455274
- PAR ID:
- 10487271
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- American Journal of Biological Anthropology
- ISSN:
- 2692-7691
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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