Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?

Anthropogenic carbonates are pyrotechnological products composed of calcium carbonate, and include wood ash, lime plaster/mortar, and hydraulic mortar. These synthetic materials are among the first produced by humans, and greatly influenced their biological and cultural evolution. Therefore, they ar...

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Main Author: Michael B. Toffolo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Heritage
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2571-9408/3/4/79
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spelling doaj-73fe29212ff149b1aedd9e27dd0f208c2020-11-27T07:53:32ZengMDPI AGHeritage2571-94082020-11-013791416143210.3390/heritage3040079Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?Michael B. Toffolo0Institut de Recherche sur les Archéomatériaux-Centre de Recherche en Physique Appliquée à l’Archéologie (IRAMAT-CRP2A), UMR 5060 CNRS, Université Bordeaux Montaigne, 8 Esplanade des Antilles, 33607 Pessac, FranceAnthropogenic carbonates are pyrotechnological products composed of calcium carbonate, and include wood ash, lime plaster/mortar, and hydraulic mortar. These synthetic materials are among the first produced by humans, and greatly influenced their biological and cultural evolution. Therefore, they are an important component of the archeological record that can provide invaluable information about past lifeways. One major aspect that has been long investigated is the possibility of obtaining accurate radiocarbon dates from the pyrogenic calcium carbonate that makes up most of these materials. This is based on the fact that anthropogenic carbonates incorporate atmospheric carbon dioxide upon the carbonation of hydrated lime, and thus bear the radiocarbon signature of the atmosphere at a given point in time. Since plaster, mortar, and ash are highly heterogeneous materials comprising several carbon contaminants, and considering that calcium carbonate is prone to dissolution and recrystallization, accurate dating depends on the effectiveness of protocols aimed at removing contaminants and on the ability to correctly identify a mineral fraction that survived unaltered through time. This article reviews the formation and dissolution processes of pyrogenic calcium carbonate, and mineralogical approaches to the definition of a ‘dateable fraction’ based on its structural properties.https://www.mdpi.com/2571-9408/3/4/79calcium carbonatecalcitearagoniteplastermortarhydraulic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael B. Toffolo
spellingShingle Michael B. Toffolo
Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?
Heritage
calcium carbonate
calcite
aragonite
plaster
mortar
hydraulic
author_facet Michael B. Toffolo
author_sort Michael B. Toffolo
title Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?
title_short Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?
title_full Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?
title_fullStr Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?
title_full_unstemmed Radiocarbon Dating of Anthropogenic Carbonates: What Is the Benchmark for Sample Selection?
title_sort radiocarbon dating of anthropogenic carbonates: what is the benchmark for sample selection?
publisher MDPI AG
series Heritage
issn 2571-9408
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Anthropogenic carbonates are pyrotechnological products composed of calcium carbonate, and include wood ash, lime plaster/mortar, and hydraulic mortar. These synthetic materials are among the first produced by humans, and greatly influenced their biological and cultural evolution. Therefore, they are an important component of the archeological record that can provide invaluable information about past lifeways. One major aspect that has been long investigated is the possibility of obtaining accurate radiocarbon dates from the pyrogenic calcium carbonate that makes up most of these materials. This is based on the fact that anthropogenic carbonates incorporate atmospheric carbon dioxide upon the carbonation of hydrated lime, and thus bear the radiocarbon signature of the atmosphere at a given point in time. Since plaster, mortar, and ash are highly heterogeneous materials comprising several carbon contaminants, and considering that calcium carbonate is prone to dissolution and recrystallization, accurate dating depends on the effectiveness of protocols aimed at removing contaminants and on the ability to correctly identify a mineral fraction that survived unaltered through time. This article reviews the formation and dissolution processes of pyrogenic calcium carbonate, and mineralogical approaches to the definition of a ‘dateable fraction’ based on its structural properties.
topic calcium carbonate
calcite
aragonite
plaster
mortar
hydraulic
url https://www.mdpi.com/2571-9408/3/4/79
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