Article ID: CBB448974402

Archaeology Enters the ‘Atomic Age’: A Short History of Radiocarbon, 1946–1960 (2020)

unapi

Today, the most powerful research technique available for assigning chronometric age to human cultural objects is radiocarbon dating. Developed in the United States in the late 1940s by an alumnus of the Manhattan Project, radiocarbon dating measures the decay of the radioactive isotope carbon-14 (C14) in organic material, and calculates the time elapsed since the materials were removed from the life cycle. This paper traces the interdisciplinary collaboration between archaeology and radiochemistry that led to the successful development of radiocarbon dating in the early 1950s, following the movement of people and ideas from Willard Libby's Chicago radiocarbon laboratory to museums, universities and government labs in the United States, Australia, Denmark and New Zealand. I show how radiocarbon research built on existing technologies and networks in atomic chemistry and physics but was deeply shaped by its original private philanthropic funders and archaeologist users, and ultimately remained to the side of many contemporaneous Cold War scientific and military projects.

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Authors & Contributors
Beattie, James
Henry, Matthew
O'Gorman, Emily
Garden, Don
Allen, Harry
Ward, Ian
Journals
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change
The Chemical Educator
History and Anthropology
Historical Records of Australian Science
Ecology
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Routledge
Palgrave Macmillan
Ashgate
Concepts
Colonialism
Climate change
Environment
Geography
Museums
Carbon dating
People
Libby, Willard Frank
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
21st century
20th century, late
20th century, early
Places
Australia
New Zealand
Asia
United States
Canada
Great Britain
Institutions
Museum of Applied Science (Melbourne)
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