Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
Reliable 14C AMS dates on bird and Pacific rat Rattus
exulans bone gelatin, from a CaCO3-rich deposit
R. N. Holdaway*, N. R. Beavan+
We tested the reliability of accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon
dates on bone gelatin by dating samples whose maximum or minimum age was
constrained by stratigraphic position relative to well-dated volcanic tephra
layers. The tephra layers were not reworked, and were thick enough to preclude
the possibility of redeposition resulting in specimens being found outside the
age bounds set by the tephras. The damp, fossiliferous, carbonate-rich sediment
was in a relatively constant, cool environment in a small cave at nearly
900 m altitude. Bones from four species of bird with different diets (a
pigeon, a rail, an owlet-nightjar, and a large ratite) and one rodent, the
Pacific rat
Rattus exulans, were dated. The calibrated (calendar) AMS
age of each bone was compared to ages predicted from their stratigraphic
position and calculated sedimentation rates, inferred from the age of each
tephra layer. Samples of moa (Aves: Dinornithiformes) eggshell were also dated
by AMS, providing an independent dating material. None of the bone gelatin or
eggshell dates displayed any significant in-built (reservoir) age relative to
the marker horizons, nor were any AMS ages significantly younger than expected.
Our results agree with previous studies in showing that
14C AMS
dates on bone gelatin from deposits that have always had a relatively cool, and
stable physical environment are likely to be reliable. For bones protected from
weathering before burial, and then incorporated in a stable, carbonate-rich
environment, the filtered bone gelatin procedure used in this study is adequate
to give reliable AMS ages. Possible reasons for discrepancies in bone gelatin
AMS dates relative to marine shell, or charcoal dates from archaeological sites
in dune deposits, are also discussed.
Keywords radiocarbon dates; bone gelatin; moa eggshell;
tephrochronology; New Zealand
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