Egyptian kingdoms
dated
Radioactive isotopes nail the
timeline of Egyptian dynasties. A three-year study of hundreds of artefacts
looks set to settle several long-standing debates about The study, which
appears in today's issue of Science1, is the
first to use high-precision measurements of radioactive carbon isotopes to
produce a detailed timeline for the reigns of Egyptian pharaohs from about 2650
BC to 1100 BC. "It is a very, very important
finding," says Hendrik Bruins, an archaeologist and geoscientist at Led by Christopher Bronk Ramsey, a physicist
and mathematician at the University of Oxford, UK, the researchers use the
well-established technique of measuring the amount of radioactive carbon-14 in
ancient artefacts. Plants absorb carbon-14 as they grow, and the radioisotope
decays naturally over time after they die. Measuring carbon-14 levels in
artefacts made of organic material allows archaeologists to determine their
age. Archaeologists throughout the world use
radiocarbon dating, but surprisingly, no high-precision dating work had been
done on Egyptian artefacts before. To circumvent this problem, Bronk Ramsey and
his team collected 211 samples from museums in Europe and the Aligning the
pharaohs
Most of the samples were taken from tombs
known to be associated with the reign of specific pharaohs. Because the order
in which these pharaohs had ruled — and the approximate lengths of their
reigns — was already known, the samples could be examined as a group.
Measuring many samples at once improved the precision of some dates to within
just two decades, far better than individual samples would allow. The findings are likely to settle some
long-standing disputes among Egyptologists. One debate involves the start of
the Similarly, there has also been some debate
about the starting date for the Middle Kingdom, which preceded the The data might also
help archaeologists and historians to determine where the explosion of the
volcano Thera figures in the history of Furthermore, the same methods can be used to
correlate Egyptian history with that of the rest of the http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100617/full/news.2010.304.html e também em português, aqui: PAULO ALEXANDRE MONTEIRO *** ******* This message contains information which may be confidential and privileged. Unless you are the addressee (or authorized to receive for the addressee), you may not use, copy or disclose to anyone the message or any information contained in the message. If you have received the message in error, please advise the sender by reply e-mail and delete the message. |
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