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Scientific News Hypotheses Historical hypotheses ARCHAEOLOGISTS REWRITE TIMELINE OF BRONZE AND IRON AGES, INCLUDING EARLY APPEARANCE OF ALPHABET
ARCHAEOLOGISTS REWRITE TIMELINE OF BRONZE AND
IRON AGES, INCLUDING EARLY APPEARANCE OF ALPHABET
Using information gleaned from the sun's solar
cycles and tree rings, archaeologists are rewriting the timeline of the Bronze
and Iron Ages. The research dates certain artifacts of the ancient eastern
Mediterranean decades earlier than previously thought. And it places an early
appearance of the alphabet outside Phoenicia at around 740 B.C.
Writing in two articles in the forthcoming
issue of the journal Science (Dec. 21), archaeologists from Cornell
University and the University of Reading (England)
and a physicist from Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg (Germany) have
given a new kind of precision to the timeline of the Bronze and Iron Ages in the
Aegean and the Near East.
"Establishing this chronology means that the
objects -- metalwork, furniture, woven textiles, and an alphabetic inscription
found in a tomb in central Turkey -- were older than previously thought by some
22 years," said Peter I. Kuniholm, Cornell professor of art history and
archaeology.
Among the artifacts found in the Midas Mound
Tumulus at Gordion, the capital of ancient Phrygia, a site west of Ankara,
Turkey, is a shallow, bronze bowl with a patch of beeswax on the rim carrying an
alphabetical inscription. The inscription is a precursor to -- or contemporary
with -- the earliest attested occurrences of the Greek alphabet. In addition to
letter forms known from ancient Greek, there is a vertical arrow, known also
from Etruscan inscriptions.
With the new chronology, the bowl now is
independently dated circa 740 B.C., making its inscription as old as the
oldest known artifacts on which the Greek alphabet appears: an oinochoe (a wine
pitcher) from the Dipylon cemetery in Athens and a cup from Pithekoussai (now
Ischia) in the Bay of Naples. The estimated dates of these pots previously had
provided archaeologists with only an approximate date for these early alphabetic
inscriptions. "The alphabet, which originated in Phoenicia at a time that
is still disputed, was moving west at a rapid pace, traditionally thought to be
by sea but now clearly by land as well. That's what this chronology shows: The
alphabet was really catching on," says Kuniholm. Scholars believe that the
birthplace of all Western alphabets, including the Greek and Roman, was
Phoenicia (present-day Lebanon, Israel and Palestine). The oldest known
Phoenician inscription was found in the Ahiram epitaph at Byblos, Lebanon,
dating from about the 11th century B.C. Scholars think the alphabet was spread
throughout the Mediterranean by traders who found the new shorthand an
improvement over the syllabic scripts such as Linear B and cuneiform Hittite.
Kuniholm and his colleagues are using the science
of both carbon dating and dendrochronology, dating through tree rings, to
calibrate history. Their latest research involved carbon-14 analysis on 10-year
slices -- that is rings covering 10 years of growth -- on wood from pine trees
from the Catacik Forest in Turkey and from oak trees in Germany. By currently
accepted models, the carbon-14 concentrations should have been identical in both
the pine and the oak. And while the scientists discovered that this was true in
general, they were surprised to find that for certain key periods, the Turkish
pine appeared to be older than the German oak by as much as 17 years. "Those
pieces of wood are the same tree-ring age, and they should have the same
radiocarbon age, but they don't," says Kuniholm.
What happened, Kuniholm believes, is that the
Turkish pine, growing in a warmer climate and at a lower latitude, absorbed less
carbon-14 during documented periods of so-called solar minima -- prolonged
cooling periods in the Northern Hemisphere, such as those in the eighth and
ninth centuries B.C. and in the 15th and 16th centuries A.D. The German oak,
which starts its growing season later in the spring than does the Turkish pine,
absorbed measurably more amounts of carbon-14 during such cooling periods.
"The trees are like a tape recorder of the radioactivity of the cosmos,"
Kuniholm said, "but they record only when they are growing."
Carbon-14, an isotope of the element carbon, is
produced in the Earth's lower stratosphere by the collision of neutrons,
produced by cosmic rays, with nitrogen. (An isotope is made up of atoms of the
same element but with different numbers of neutrons.) During periods of high
solar activity, the solar wind prevents charged particles from entering the
atmosphere -- thus producing little carbon-14. However, carbon-14 production
peaks during the solar minima, and it enters the Earth's troposphere as carbon
dioxide-14 during the late spring in the Northern Hemisphere. By the following
spring, the higher concentration of carbon in the troposphere is diluted. Thus,
German oak, which grows late in the spring and summer, absorbs less carbon
dioxide-14 than Turkish pine or juniper, which grows from the early spring to
summer. "This is the first time scientists have been able to note a
regional difference in tree rings of the same dendrochronological age,"
says Kuniholm. "Sadly, now, with all the carbon in our atmosphere, with the
pollution we have from our cars and factories and energy facilities, the trees
have all but given up providing many of these valuable signals."
Kuniholm's co-authors on the Science
papers were Sturt Manning of the University of Reading, Bernd Kromer of
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, and Maryanne Newton, Cornell
doctoral candidate. Research collaborators also include Marco Spurk, Universität
Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany, and Ingeborg Levin, Universität Heidelberg,
Germany. The concurrent Science articles are titled, "Regional
Radioactive Carbon Dioxide Offsets in the Troposphere: Magnitude, Mechanisms and
Consequences" and "Anatolian Tree Rings and a New Chronology for the
East Mediterranean Bronze-Iron Ages."
The research was funded by the Institute for
Aegean Prehistory, the National Science Foundation, the Malcolm H. Wiener
Foundation, the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Germany's Federal Ministry of
Educational Research.
Related World Wide Web sites:
The following sites provide additional
information on this news release. Some might not be part of the Cornell
University community, and Cornell has no control over their content or
availability.
o Aegean Dendrochronology Project: http://www.arts.cornell.edu/dendro
o A companion opinion piece in Science by
Paula Reimer, Livermore Laboratories:
http://www.calib.org/paula
Contact: Blaine P. Friedlander Jr.
Office: 607-255-3290
E-Mail: bpf2@cornell.edu
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Cornell
University
Publishing date: December 25, 2001
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