Dating Technology
Roy Switsur
Upon encountering 
                a new site, the archaeologist immediately requires information about its 
                age in order to set it in context with other sites. In research into our 
                heritage the conservationist or architect may be able to date the general 
                period of a building he is working with from either the situation, materials 
                of construction, type of timber joints or other stylistic features. Almost 
                certainly the century or portion of a century when it was built may be 
                assigned with some certainty. However, as more and more work is done and 
                increasing numbers of structures with complex constructional phases are 
                encountered, the general features may not be sufficient to give the accuracy 
                in dating that is currently required. If research into other sources of 
                information also fails to throw light on the building's history, resort 
                may be made to the various scientific methods of dating. This article 
                outlines three of the most important methods currently used for dating 
                buildings or, in a complex situation, the order of construction within 
                the building. These are: dendrochronology (or 'tree-ring' dating), radiocarbon 
                dating and thermoluminescence dating. 
          
                Each method has a distinct role in the investigation of historic buildings. 
                None is infallible and before embarking on an extensive dating survey, 
                due thought must be given to what might be achieved and which methods 
                might be the more successful. If necessary, seek advice.
          
                Whilst earlier types of wooden joints may be copied in later buildings 
                and earlier styles may be reintroduced in later periods to confound the 
                conservationist or historian, any reuse of older materials should become 
                obvious by the use of the chronometrical methods described here. The incorporation 
                of ancient bog oak into a building, no matter how intricately carved or 
                jointed, would immediately become obvious to the chronologist, as would 
            timber renovations.
DENDROCHRONOLOGY
                Dendrochronology is the oldest method, having been introduced over a century 
                ago by an American astronomer, Professor A E Douglass. He wanted to know 
                whether the number of sunspots affected weather on Earth. If this were 
                so, the width of the annual growth rings would show changes in synchronism 
                with the sunspot numbers. He established a laboratory in the university 
                of Arizona, at Tucson, to study tree-rings. Unfortunately, after many 
                years of analysis he was not able to confirm the correlation he sought. 
                Nevertheless, the laboratory was able to demonstrate many interesting 
                properties of ring widths and their relationship with various aspects 
                of climate and other natural phenomena and, of course, their use in the 
                accurate dating of timber. His laboratory is still one of the leading 
                centres in world dendrochronology. It was not until 1939 that the science 
                was taken seriously in Europe, mainly through the efforts of Professor 
                Huber in Germany, and not until after World War II that such studies became 
                established in the UK. The main centres in Britain researching this field 
                are located at universities in Belfast, Cambridge, East Anglia, London, 
                Nottingham and Sheffield with several freelance practitioners. Whilst 
                most dendrochronological research is still concerned with climatic change, 
                where the precise dating provided by the growth rings is of vital importance, 
                all units in this country are proficient in performing dendrochronological 
                surveys of buildings.
              
                Oak is the species of prime interest and it is possible to date wood back 
                to over 7,000 years with a precision, in appropriate circumstances, of 
                a single year. This is most impressive and makes dendrochronology the 
                main dating method for structures containing oak timber. The method relies 
                upon the response of trees to the weather during the growing season, which 
                runs from March to October. In a 'good' growing season the trees within 
                a large climatically homogeneous region all respond by putting on a wide 
                growth ring within the cambium which separates the sapwood from the bark. 
                In a 'poor' growing season the trees all respond so that only a very narrow 
                growth ring is formed. In more typical growing seasons a ring of intermediate 
                width is produced. (It should be noted that there is no direct linear 
                relationship between ring width and, say, sunshine, or other weather components) 
                Thus a 'good' or 'poor' growing season is defined with reference to the 
                amount of growth produced. For example, the year 1976 had a gloriously 
                hot, long summer with most rainfall arriving in autumn but the trees did 
                not appreciate it and all oaks produced a distinctively narrow ring. Again 
                the summer of 1915 was cold and wet, quite different from 1976, yet the 
                trees also produced a distinctly narrow growth ring. So it will be seen 
                that seasons that are hot and dry as well as those that are cold and wet 
                will produce a narrow ring so that such a ring is not diagnostic of the 
                weather. Year by year the trees throughout the region produce a similar 
                pattern of wide and narrow rings in response to the weather changes. It 
                is this pattern that allows the accurate dating. The pattern of ring widths 
                on a specimen taken from a building is matched, using a computer with 
                a 'master chronology' often several centuries long for the particular 
                area. This regional chronology will have been painstakingly built up from 
                many thousands of measurements and by cross-matching many overlapping 
                patterns of timbers. The youngest patterns are obtained from living trees, 
                where the felling date of the final ring is known. Progressively older 
                patterns are obtained from trees in recent buildings, older buildings, 
                archaeological sites and ancient bog oaks. Because of local, non-climatic 
                causes of change of growth width, the chronologies around the country 
                vary somewhat, and the best dating match is always obtained from a local 
                regional master chronology. 
              
                The dendro-date is thus the year in which the final ring of the specimen 
                grew (the year in which the tree was felled, but not necessarily the year 
                in which the building was constructed). In order to obtain an accurate 
                match and hence a date, it is important to have at least 80 rings on the 
                specimen that is to he dated. With fewer rings the pattern might have 
                repeat matches at different points in the time scale and so give rise 
                to multiple possible dates. This has implications for some vernacular 
                structures in which rapidly grown, wide-ringed oaks, 30 to 40 years old, 
                were used. In such instances it might be possible to date the wall plate 
                which often contains far more rings. In practice it is found that 100 
                or 120 growth rings are most likely to provide a unique match. However, 
                because of the local ecological, non-climatic effects on the tree ring, 
                it is not possible to guarantee that any particular specimen will give 
                a date. In order to have greater certainty it is important to obtain several 
                samples, in the form of cores drilled from the timber, and to construct 
                a 'site chronology' for the building. The number of cores required will 
                depend upon the complexity of the structure, but some ten cores per building 
                phase is preferred. These are normally taken by the dendrochronologist 
                in co-operation with the historian and the position of the cores is carefully 
                marked on the building plan for future analysis of the results. The core 
                leaves a small hole in the timber of about 15mm in diameter which may 
                be plugged with a timber dowel.
              
                Although this method is capable of dating to the individual year, in practice 
                several factors conspire to reduce the precision in dating the construction, 
                sometimes drastically, and it is important to be aware of the limitations. 
                Whilst in the middle ages it was the practice to use the timber 'green' 
                - usually within a year of the felling date - in more recent times the 
                timber is usually allowed to dry out, sometimes for decades, before use. 
                Furthermore, carpenters, aware of the effects of insect attacks, would 
                deliberately remove the sapwood and even some heartwood. The number of 
                sapwood rings may vary between 15 and 50 years, depending on the position 
                in and the age of the tree. Thus the year of the last ring dated could 
                be misleading to the construction date and be underestimated by an unknown 
                number, possibly 60 years. Sapwood may be found on at least some of the 
                timbers in the dendrochronological survey and the site master chronology 
                will lead to a more reliable date than an individual core.
RADIOCARBON DATING
Whereas tree-ring dating is limited in this country to oak structures, 
                radiocarbon dating may be used for any wood species and, indeed, for any 
                other organic based materials found in buildings such as: wattle and daub; 
                straw used for insulation; hair used in plaster; leather wall hangings; 
                and, perhaps surprisingly, mortar. The range of radiocarbon dating reaches 
                back to 60,000 years. For the last few thousand years it can have a precision 
                of a few decades and may, in certain circumstances, be comparable with 
                tree-ring dates. The method was conceived by American Professor Willard 
                F Libby of Chicago in 1947. The laboratory at Cambridge here in England 
                was among the first six to be set up anywhere in the world. There are 
                now several radiocarbon dating laboratories in Britain including those 
                at Belfast, Cambridge, East Kilbride, Oxford and Swansea, as well as a 
                commercial unit near Harwell. 
              
                Radiocarbon dating is based on the element carbon, the basis of all life 
                on earth. The atoms of this element are of three different types or 'isotopes'. 
                They are identical chemically but have slightly different physical properties, 
                particularly in mass. The isotopes are respectively 12, 13 and 14 times 
                as heavy as the common hydrogen atom (the base unit by which the weight 
                of other elements is measured). The isotopes C-12 and C-13 are stable 
                and make up the bulk of the element, but the C-14 isotope, which is mildly 
                radioactive, is extremely rare. The instability of radiocarbon results 
                in half of it disappearing in 5,730 years (its 'half-life'). This instability 
                is the basis of the dating method. All creatures have the same concentration 
                of radiocarbon in their cells while they remain alive. This level is maintained 
                constant by a sequence of events affecting the food web. It starts with 
                photosynthesis in green leaves of plants, whereby atmospheric water vapour 
                and carbon dioxide, containing the radiocarbon, are combined in the presence 
                of sunlight to produce sugar. The plant biological process converts this 
                to the myriad of substances required for life. These substances are shared 
                via the food network to all animals including man. For our purposes it 
                may be assumed that the amount of radiocarbon in the atmosphere is constant 
                over time.
              
                Once the creature dies the food chain is broken and the concentration 
                of radiocarbon in the cells falls away. By measuring the residual C-14 
                concentration in the material the date of its death may be calculated. 
                In the case of tree-rings the food chain is effectively broken at the 
                end of the growing season and the radiocarbon concentration immediately 
                begins to fall. Thus, in principle, the age of each growth ring may be 
                measured. In practice, the measurements may resolve differences of about 
                20 or 30 years. 
              
                Samples from a building for radiocarbon dating should be taken with care 
                and due regard to provenance. For timber specimens, samples should be 
                obtained as near to the bark as possible, as for dendrochronology. Samples 
                such as leather, cloth, food residues or straw represent a year's growth 
                and so a point in time. Thatch, whether straw or rush, will date the last 
                repair and not necessarily the construction date. Mortar is made by heating 
                limestone to over 850°C to form quicklime. When slaked and used as 
                mortar between layers of bricks it dries by absorption of contemporary 
                carbon dioxide from the air and so may be used to date this event.
THERMOLUMINESCENCE DATING
Thermoluminescence, or TL, was first used in the 1950s for the measurement 
              of radiation exposure, and underwent a period of difficulties before being 
              applied to dating; the first dates it produced being too young. Upon resolution 
              of the technical problems the method was used for dating pottery and burnt 
              flints from archaeological sites with a precision of about 7-10 per cent. 
              Subsequently it has been used in the investigation of recent geological 
              formations reaching back to half a million years. In its most common form 
              it may shed light on the age of fired clay and quartz based materials 
              but approaching the present no closer than about a thousand years. A modern 
              variant on the technique is able to date far more recent fired clay material.
              
                TL depends upon minute levels of background radiation in the clay matrix, 
                a tiny fraction of which is absorbed and stored as a charge at imperfections 
                in the crystal lattice of quartz inclusions. The firing of pottery removes 
                the inherited geological TL and sets the dating clock to zero. In the 
                laboratory grains of quartz are extracted from the pottery and heated 
                in light-tight apparatus at a constant rate to around 400°C . Superimposed 
                upon the red-hot glow, a tiny flash of light is produced as the stored 
                energy is released (hence 'thermoluminescence') and the flash is recorded 
                by computer. The quantity of light produced is proportional to the length 
                of time since it was last fired. Unfortunately, problems remain since 
                all samples do not have the same sensitivity to the radiation and background 
                radiation levels vary. Furthermore, the results are sensitive to water 
                content. Thus many measurements must be made in order to obtain a date.
              
                Recently this method has been improved. The flash of light is released 
                by scanning the sample with an energetic green laser beam and light-emitting 
                diodes are used as detectors. This form of the method, known as 'optically 
                stimulated luminescence dating', enables objects which are not more than 
                a few hundred years old to be dated to within a few decades. Hence it 
                is far more useful than the original TL technique in dating buildings. 
                The requirement remains that the sample should have undergone some heating 
                event to set the clock to zero. It also requires that a dosimeter be left 
                undisturbed in situ at the site for some months in order to discover the 
                natural radioactivity permeating the samples. These must be inorganic 
                and contain some light transmitting materials. Pottery artefacts and certain 
                bricks might be suitable specimens, and often TL provides the only way 
                to distinguish medieval or Tudor bricks and chimney pots from Victorian 
                reproductions.
              
                There are several laboratories capable of this sort of measurement in 
                this country which include the Geology Department, Aberystwyth; the British 
                Museum; the Godwin Institute, Cambridge; the Department of Archaeology, 
                Durham; Environmental Sciences; the Institute of Archaeology, University 
                College, London; and the Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History 
                of Art, Oxford.
There are thus now various ways in which chronologists are able to help conservators, historians and architects in their endeavours in dating our heritage.



