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Radiocarbon Dating in the Soviet Union1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2016

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This report covers the investigations of the Laboratory of Archeological Technology of the Institute of Archeology of the Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R. under the technical direction of Corresponding Academician I. Ye. Starik. This work was begun in 1956, but the bulk of the dates were obtained during 1959–61 by the ethyl-benzol technique. For a control, ethyl-benzol was synthesized from the annual rings of the heartwood of an 80-yr-old larch. Depending on the size of the sample submitted for analysis, from 15–70 ml of ethyl-benzol was used.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The American Journal of Science

Footnotes

1

Subm. by Henry Field and D. B. Shimkin, Harvard Univ.; extracted from p. 26–30 of S. I. Rudenko: Novyye metody v arkheologicheskikh issledovaniyakh (New Methods in Archeological Investigations), Institut Arkheologiyi, Akademiya Nauk SSSR, Moscow, 1963. The techniques used are described in p. 9–26, 32–56.

2

b.p. — before present or absolute age before 1963. Brackets have been inserted to clarify the text. (D.B.S.)

3

It is also possible that these samples are interstadial within Würm rather than Riss-Würm interglacial. (D.B.S.)

4

Chernigov is on the Desna River. (H.F.)