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10 March 2009
Carbon dating
The invention: Atechnique that measures the radioactive decay of
carbon 14 in organic substances to determine the ages of artifacts
as old as ten thousand years.
The people behind the invention:
Willard Frank Libby (1908-1980), an American chemist who won
the 1960 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Charles Wesley Ferguson (1922-1986), a scientist who
demonstrated that carbon 14 dates before 1500 b.c. needed to
be corrected
One in a Trillion
Carbon dioxide in the earth’s atmosphere contains a mixture of
three carbon isotopes (isotopes are atoms of the same element that
contain different numbers of neutrons), which occur in the following
percentages: about 99 percent carbon 12, about 1 percent carbon
13, and approximately one atom in a trillion of radioactive carbon
14. Plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during photosynthesis,
and then animals eat the plants, so all living plants and
animals contain a small amount of radioactive carbon.
When a plant or animal dies, its radioactivity slowly decreases as
the radioactive carbon 14 decays. The time it takes for half of any radioactive
substance to decay is known as its “half-life.” The half-life
for carbon 14 is known to be about fifty-seven hundred years. The
carbon 14 activity will drop to one-half after one half-life, onefourth
after two half-lives, one-eighth after three half-lives, and so
forth. After ten or twenty half-lives, the activity becomes too low to
be measurable. Coal and oil, which were formed from organic matter
millions of years ago, have long since lost any carbon 14 activity.
Wood samples from an Egyptian tomb or charcoal from a prehistoric
fireplace a few thousand years ago, however, can be dated with
good reliability from the leftover radioactivity.
In the 1940’s, the properties of radioactive elements were still
being discovered and were just beginning to be used to solve problems.
Scientists still did not know the half-life of carbon 14, and archaeologists still depended mainly on historical evidence to determine
the ages of ancient objects.
In early 1947,Willard Frank Libby started a crucial experiment in
testing for radioactive carbon. He decided to test samples of methane
gas from two different sources. One group of samples came
from the sewage disposal plant at Baltimore, Maryland, which was
rich in fresh organic matter. The other sample of methane came from
an oil refinery, which should have contained only ancient carbon
from fossils whose radioactivity should have completely decayed.
The experimental results confirmed Libby’s suspicions: The methane
from fresh sewage was radioactive, but the methane from oil
was not. Evidently, radioactive carbon was present in fresh organic
material, but it decays away eventually.
Tree-Ring Dating
In order to establish the validity of radiocarbon dating, Libby analyzed
known samples of varying ages. These included tree-ring
samples from the years 575 and 1075 and one redwood from 979
b.c.e., as well as artifacts from Egyptian tombs going back to about
3000 b.c.e. In 1949, he published an article in the journal Science that
contained a graph comparing the historical ages and the measured
radiocarbon ages of eleven objects. The results were accurate within
10 percent, which meant that the general method was sound.
The first archaeological object analyzed by carbon dating, obtained
from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, was a
piece of cypress wood from the tomb of King Djoser of Egypt. Based
on historical evidence, the age of this piece of wood was about fortysix
hundred years. A small sample of carbon obtained from this
wood was deposited on the inside of Libby’s radiation counter, giving
a count rate that was about 40 percent lower than that of modern
organic carbon. The resulting age of the wood calculated from its residual
radioactivity was about thirty-eight hundred years, a difference
of eight hundred years. Considering that this was the first object
to be analyzed, even such a rough agreement with the historic
age was considered to be encouraging.
The validity of radiocarbon dating depends on an important assumption—
namely, that the abundance of carbon 14 in nature has been constant for many thousands of years. If carbon 14 was less
abundant at some point in history, organic samples from that era
would have started with less radioactivity. When analyzed today,
their reduced activity would make them appear to be older than
they really are.Charles Wesley Ferguson from the Tree-Ring Research Laboratory
at the University of Arizona tackled this problem. He measured
the age of bristlecone pine trees both by counting the rings and by
using carbon 14 methods. He found that carbon 14 dates before
1500 b.c.e. needed to be corrected. The results show that radiocarbon
dates are older than tree-ring counting dates by as much as several
hundred years for the oldest samples. He knew that the number
of tree rings had given him the correct age of the pines, because trees
accumulate one ring of growth for every year of life. Apparently, the
carbon 14 content in the atmosphere has not been constant. Fortunately,
tree-ring counting gives reliable dates that can be used to
correct radiocarbon measurements back to about 6000 b.c.e.
Impact
Some interesting samples were dated by Libby’s group. The
Dead Sea Scrolls had been found in a cave by an Arab shepherd in
1947, but some Bible scholars at first questioned whether they were
genuine. The linen wrapping from the Book of Isaiah was tested for
carbon 14, giving a date of 100 b.c.e., which helped to establish its
authenticity. Human hair from an Egyptian tomb was determined
to be nearly five thousand years old.Well-preserved sandals from a
cave in eastern Oregon were determined to be ninety-three hundred
years old. A charcoal sample from a prehistoric site in western
South Dakota was found to be about seven thousand years old.
The Shroud of Turin, located in Turin, Italy, has been a controversial
object for many years. It is a linen cloth, more than four meters
long, which shows the image of a man’s body, both front and back.
Some people think it may have been the burial shroud of Jesus
Christ after his crucifixion. Ateam of scientists in 1978 was permitted
to study the shroud, using infrared photography, analysis of
possible blood stains, microscopic examination of the linen fibers,
and other methods. The results were ambiguous. A carbon 14 test
was not permitted because it would have required cutting a piece
about the size of a handkerchief from the shroud.
Anew method of measuring carbon 14 was developed in the late
1980’s. It is called “accelerator mass spectrometry,” or AMS. Unlike
Libby’s method, it does not count the radioactivity of carbon. Instead, a mass spectrometer directly measures the ratio of carbon 14
to ordinary carbon. The main advantage of this method is that the
sample size needed for analysis is about a thousand times smaller
than before. The archbishop of Turin permitted three laboratories
with the appropriate AMS apparatus to test the shroud material.
The results agreed that the material was from the fourteenth century,
not from the time of Christ. The figure on the shroud may be a
watercolor painting on linen.
Since Libby’s pioneering experiments in the late 1940’s, carbon
14 dating has established itself as a reliable dating technique for archaeologists
and cultural historians. Further improvements are expected
to increase precision, to make it possible to use smaller samples,
and to extend the effective time range of the method back to
fifty thousand years or earlier.
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