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How Old Tree Rings And Ancient Wood Are Helping Rewrite History
Science Daily ^ | 10-27-2007 | Cornell University

Posted on 10/28/2007 11:05:05 AM PDT by blam

How Old Tree Rings And Ancient Wood Are Helping Rewrite History

ScienceDaily (Oct. 27, 2007) — Cornell archaeologists are rewriting history with the help of tree rings from 900-year-old trees, wood found on ancient buildings and through analysis of the isotopes (especially radiocarbon dating) and chemistry they can find in that wood.

Sturt Manning talks to visitors during a demonstration of the tree-ring laboratory following his presentation during Trustee/Council Weekend. At the lecture, Manning explained how students and lab staff members precisely dated a wooden support beam from McGraw Hall to 1870. (Credit: Jason Koski/Cornell University Photography)"

By collecting thousands of years worth of overlapping tree rings, with each ring representing a tree's annual growth, the researchers have created long-term records in the eastern Mediterranean that allow them to precisely date such seminal milestones in history as when Hammurabi, "the law-giver," reigned, when the massive Santorini volcanic eruption occurred, and the timelines of the Bronze and Iron ages, as well as many more recent events.

Sturt Manning, director of the Malcolm and Carolyn Wiener Laboratory for Aegean and Near Eastern Dendrochronology at Cornell, summarized his work for Cornell council members and trustees, Oct. 19 in Statler Hall. Dendrochronology is the science of comparing growth patterns in tree trunks to date past events or climate changes. Cornell's dendrochronology laboratory now holds more than 40,000 tree-ring samples, including many from the eastern Mediterranean.

Trees of the same species from the same geographical area have fairly similar ring patterns, Manning said, because they are exposed to similar climatic conditions. By starting with living trees and then finding samples from slightly older trees used in buildings and still older trees from more ancient sites, archaeologists have been able to overlap tree-ring data to create chronologies that date back thousands of years.

Radiocarbon dating, statistical analysis, researchers' trained eyes and prior knowledge of events in the area are then used to match new samples with tree-ring chronologies from the same area. Manning and his staff in the lab have used such techniques to verify, for example, the likely origins of a Circle of Rembrandt painting (referring to an elite group of students that worked directly with the artist). He showed that the oak board of the painting came from the same tree as the board of another painting, whose origins are known and which hangs in a museum in Krakow, Poland.

Similarly, scholars have debated for more than 150 years about the dates of the ancient civilizations of the Babylonians, the Assyrians and the lifetime of Hammurabi, the Babylonian king who helped create the oldest set of written laws. Mainstream scholars have proposed dates for his reign that differ by 300 years.

"You can't do history if you have a difference of 300 years or so," said Manning. "That would place George Washington as a contemporary of some person living right now. ... You'd get entirely the wrong historical reconstruction if you didn't have the dates sorted out."

Using ancient beams from palaces of known contemporaries of Hammurabi, Cornell researchers combined radiocarbon dating techniques with dendrochronological evidence to date Hammurabi to around 1792 B.C., Manning said.

Similar techniques used on wood buried beneath volcanic ash allowed Manning and others to date the Santorini volcanic eruption, one of the largest in the last 10,000 years, as most likely occurring in the late 17th century B.C., 100 years earlier than previously believed. The discovery may rewrite the late Bronze Age history of Mediterranean civilizations, he said.

Adapted from materials provided by Cornell University.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: calliste; catastrophism; date; dendrochronology; diodorus; godsgravesglyphs; history; hoax; rings; tree
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The last I've read, the world-wide tree-ring record presently is 10,000 years long.
1 posted on 10/28/2007 11:05:07 AM PDT by blam
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To: SunkenCiv

GGG Ping


2 posted on 10/28/2007 11:05:30 AM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: blam
"...comparing growth patterns in tree trunks to date past events or climate changes."

Good thing they're not using the data purely as a treemometer, otherwise we'd have GLOBAL warming as opposed to (the sure evidence of) climate change.

3 posted on 10/28/2007 11:13:37 AM PDT by Paladin2 (We don't fix the problem, we fix the blame!)
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To: blam

Good article. Thanks.


4 posted on 10/28/2007 11:14:01 AM PDT by Coyoteman (Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.)
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To: blam
likely occurring in the late 17th century B.C.

It's nice to see someone using "B.C.", instead of the politically correct and Christophobic "B.C.E.".

Personally, I'm an atheist. But until someone starts using some number other than 2007 for this year, then it's "B.C" and "A.D.".

5 posted on 10/28/2007 11:39:53 AM PDT by narby
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To: narby

“Similar techniques used on wood buried beneath volcanic ash allowed Manning and others to date the Santorini volcanic eruption, one of the largest in the last 10,000 years, as most likely occurring in the late 17th century B.C., 100 years earlier than previously believed. “

Given that Santorini has been linked to the miracles in Exodus, wonder how this new time line fits in with Biblical scholars?


6 posted on 10/28/2007 12:00:47 PM PDT by txzman (Jer 23:29)
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To: narby

I thought the same thing about the new dating terminology but the lack of change of the starting point and ending point of CE/BCE.


7 posted on 10/28/2007 12:08:49 PM PDT by JLS
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To: blam

I kinda assumed that they were doing this all along. It seems like an obvious tool to date known geological events and weather trends.


8 posted on 10/28/2007 12:09:31 PM PDT by Desron13 (If you constantly vote between the lesser of two evils then evil is your ultimate destination.)
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To: Desron13
I kinda assumed that they were doing this all along. It seems like an obvious tool to date known geological events and weather trends.

They have been. Libby, who invented the method, used some Egyptian tomb wood for his first tests.

9 posted on 10/28/2007 12:15:56 PM PDT by Coyoteman (Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.)
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To: blam
most likely occurring in the late 17th century B.C., 100 years earlier than previously believed.

That puts it over 30 year later the the autumn 1628 BC date Charles Pellegrino claimed.

10 posted on 10/28/2007 12:21:07 PM PDT by InABunkerUnderSF ("Gun Control" is not about the guns. "Illegal Immigration" is not about the immigration)
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To: narby

Thank you. It grates on me. Not because I’m a Christian, but because it’s revisionist. And PC.
susie


11 posted on 10/28/2007 12:29:57 PM PDT by brytlea (amnesty--an act of clemency by an authority by which pardon is granted esp. to a group of individual)
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To: narby
Personally, I'm an atheist. But until someone starts using some number other than 2007 for this year, then it's "B.C" and "A.D.".

Off topic but my personal favorite are the newsies that refer to the weather phenomenon "El Nino" as "The Child" as it's too PC to call it for what it was named after - "The Christ Child".

12 posted on 10/28/2007 12:30:37 PM PDT by VeniVidiVici (No buy China!!)
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To: blam

13 posted on 10/28/2007 12:39:40 PM PDT by UnklGene
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To: narby
It's nice to see someone using "B.C.", instead of the politically correct and Christophobic "B.C.E.".

Amen. (So to speak.) I get SO ticked off when these scientists use that cumbersome "abbreviation". At first I thought it meant Before the Christian Era and wondered why the useless change. Then I read Before the Common Era and it became clear that this was just another anti-Christian gambit. I suspect some of these scientists have to use it because of peer pressure, but I'm glad to see some that buck the trend.

Like you, I am not into any religion but I go out of my way whenever afforded the opportunity to use AD or BC. The triviality of the anti-West/anti-Christian crowd is amazing.

14 posted on 10/28/2007 12:40:35 PM PDT by Oatka (A society of sheep must in time beget a government of wolves." –Bertrand de Jouvenel)
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To: blam

Treebeard would be pleased.


15 posted on 10/28/2007 1:38:50 PM PDT by lilylangtree (Veni, Vidi, Vici)
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To: Oatka

I prefer “BG” — Before Gregorian.


16 posted on 10/28/2007 1:44:20 PM PDT by bvw
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To: narby
likely occurring in the late 17th century B.C.

It's nice to see someone using "B.C.", instead of the politically correct and Christophobic "B.C.E.".

Personally, I'm an atheist. But until someone starts using some number other than 2007 for this year, then it's "B.C" and "A.D.".


Ditto on both counts.

Next thing you know we'll start calling August by the older name Sextilis because Augustus Caesar was declared a God by the Roman Senate.

jas3
17 posted on 10/28/2007 1:53:57 PM PDT by jas3
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To: Coyoteman
I just completed reading this book and they analysed an individual ring (Isotopes or some such) to prove a point.
18 posted on 10/28/2007 2:09:43 PM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: blam

BTTT


19 posted on 10/28/2007 2:26:11 PM PDT by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: blam

I’ve read a few threads where some folks go on and on about how this radio carbon dating is flawed.

Someone needs to ping few of those posters to get their reaction to this news.


20 posted on 10/28/2007 2:47:04 PM PDT by Balding_Eagle (If America falls, darkness will cover the face of the earth for a thousand years.)
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