Marina
DEFAULT
You must be logged in to view this content. Please click the button below to log in.
LoginNot sure what you're looking for? Browse the A-Z index. Archaeologists have two main ways to tell the age of sites and artifacts. Relative dating tells how old something is in relation to other objects, but cannot provide a year or specific date of use. In contrast, absolute dating provides a specific calendar year for the occupation of a site. Relative dating considers how old artifacts and sites are, in comparison to other artifacts and sites. Stratigraphy and style are both used for relative dating. Although relative dating can tell us what is older or younger, it doesn't tell us exactly how old something is.
Imagine someone telling you a story where all the important events happened in the wrong order. It might be confusing, or even make no sense at all. Being able to tell how old things are and put them in the right order is one of the most important skills archaeologists have. We call this skill dating because it is how we organize our discoveries in time, like dates on a calendar. Archaeologists use two kinds of dating methods: relative dating and absolute dating.
Dating techniques are procedures used by scientists to determine the age of rocks, fossils, or artifacts. Relative dating methods tell only if one sample is older or younger than another; absolute dating methods provide an approximate date in years. The latter have generally been available only since
Dating methods in historical archaeology differ little from the methods of archaeology in general. Both absolute and relative dating approaches are employed. However, historical archaeology has tended to de-emphasize archaeometric analyses because of the availability of a documentary record.
There are no comments for this escort yet.