TY - JOUR
T1 - Dating human occupation on diatom-phytolith-rich sediment
T2 - Case studies of mustang spring and Lubbock Lake, Texas, USA
AU - Hatté, Christine
AU - Hodgins, Gregory
AU - Holliday, Vance T.
AU - Jull, A. J.Timothy
PY - 2010/3
Y1 - 2010/3
N2 - The Great Plains of North America have a rich archaeological record that spans the period from Late Glacial to Historic times, a period that also witnessed significant changes in climate and ecology. Chronometric dating of archaeo-logical sites in many areas of the Great Plains, however, is often problematic, largely because charcoal and wood-the preferred materials for radiocarbon dating-are scarce in this grassland environment with few trees. Two reference archaeo-logical sites are studied here: Mustang Spring and Lubbock Lake, Texas, USA. We carry out a geochronological approach based on a cross-study of carbon-derived data: combustion yield, δ13C, 14C age differences between high temperature and low temperature released carbon, and the 14C age itself. A study that incorporates multiple approaches is required to solve issues induced by the sedimentological context, which is rich in both freshwater diatoms and phytoliths from quite different origins. Analysis of carbon-derived data allows us to draw a succession model of dry and wet episodes and to associate it with a chro-nological framework. In this way, we can assert that, for the Mustang Spring site, several human occupations existed from ~11 kyr BP to ~8.7 kyr BP along the 110-cm-long series with an interruption of ~150 yr that is associated with a palustrine envi-ronment between the Plainview and Firstview occupations.
AB - The Great Plains of North America have a rich archaeological record that spans the period from Late Glacial to Historic times, a period that also witnessed significant changes in climate and ecology. Chronometric dating of archaeo-logical sites in many areas of the Great Plains, however, is often problematic, largely because charcoal and wood-the preferred materials for radiocarbon dating-are scarce in this grassland environment with few trees. Two reference archaeo-logical sites are studied here: Mustang Spring and Lubbock Lake, Texas, USA. We carry out a geochronological approach based on a cross-study of carbon-derived data: combustion yield, δ13C, 14C age differences between high temperature and low temperature released carbon, and the 14C age itself. A study that incorporates multiple approaches is required to solve issues induced by the sedimentological context, which is rich in both freshwater diatoms and phytoliths from quite different origins. Analysis of carbon-derived data allows us to draw a succession model of dry and wet episodes and to associate it with a chro-nological framework. In this way, we can assert that, for the Mustang Spring site, several human occupations existed from ~11 kyr BP to ~8.7 kyr BP along the 110-cm-long series with an interruption of ~150 yr that is associated with a palustrine envi-ronment between the Plainview and Firstview occupations.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0033822200044994
DO - 10.1017/S0033822200044994
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77953662197
SN - 0033-8222
VL - 52
SP - 13
EP - 24
JO - Radiocarbon
JF - Radiocarbon
IS - 1
ER -