4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

DEPENDING ON C-14 DATA: CHRONOLOGICAL FRAMEWORKS IN THE NEOLITHIC AND CHALCOLITHIC OF SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

Journal

RADIOCARBON
Volume 51, Issue 2, Pages 751-770

Publisher

UNIV ARIZONA DEPT GEOSCIENCES
DOI: 10.1017/S0033822200056071

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With the introduction of the radiocarbon method in 1949 and the calibration curve constantly improving since 1965, but especially due to the development of the more accurate accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dating some 30 yr ago, the application of the WC method in prehistory revolutionized traditional chronological frameworks. Theories and models are adjusted to new C-14 sequences, and such sequences even lead to the creation of new theories and models. In our con tribution, we refer to 2 major issues that are still heavily debated, although their first absolute dating occurred some decades ago: I) file transition front (he Mesolithic to the Early Neolithic in the eastern and western Aegean, Very high 14C (I ala for the beginning of the Neolithic in Greece around 7000 BC fueled debates around the Preceramic period in Thessaly (Argissa-Magoula, Sesklo) and the Early Neolithic in Macedonia (Nea Nikomedeia). A reinterpretation of these data shows that file Neolithic in Greece did not start prior to 6400/6300 BC: 2) the beginning and the end of file Chalcolithic period ill SE Europe. Shifting from relative chronologies dating the Chalcolithic to the 3rd millennium BC to an absolute chronology assigning the Kodzadermen-Gumelnita-Karanovo VI cultural complex to the 5th Millennium BC. the exact beginning and the end of the period are still under research. New data from Varna (Bulgaria) and Pietrele (Romania) suggest that start and end of the SE European Chalcolithic have to be dated deeper into the 5th Millennium BC.

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