I'm trying to enter in the charming world of dendrochronology, and I'm moving my first steps.
I started using hi-resolution photos to extract the datas. Unfortunately (like anyone else who begins) my only source of master curves is the database from World Data Center for Paleoclimatology.
Now I'm trying to date a sculpture which seems to be made of elm. I read it is possible to use it for dendrochronology, and I'd like to know if there are some sources of master curves including elm, since WDCP doesn't have any.
The origin of the wood should be northern italy.
Thank you
Francesco
Elm dating
Re: Elm dating
Ciao Francesco,
After a superficial and really fast search in the web, effectively elm seems to be a poor studied species under dendroarchaeological point of view, or at least free-access data seems to be hard to obtain. I found just one sample of elm from Italy (http://dendro.cornell.edu/reports/report2000.pdf): sadly it’s a protohistoric sample and furthermore it’s not dated because of some problems during growing. Anyway maybe you can find some curves googling in different languages and searching in real libraries.
If you don’t have a reference curve of the species you are interesting in, here goes, just as suggestion, a personal, absolutely inelegant, “protocol”:
1) Search for at least one dated curve of elm from northern Italy, Alps, etc… It have not to be necessarily in digital format: you can convert published diagrams by using the coorecorder facility. Look also for ecological-related papers: often they have short curves, too short for dating purposes but useful by the point of view of this personal method. If you don’t find any, sample yourself a little curve.
2) Search in all databases (two more: http://dendrodb.cerege.fr/ and http://www.wsl.ch/dendro/dendrodb.html) and in published papers all the curves near the zone from which is your little elm dated curve.
3) Play with the data for revealing better correspondence between elm and other species in the same area.
4) Do a “massive attack” comparing all curves you have collected with your undated curve (you can find examples of the process in Lars-Ake’s site, under "Miscellaneous" section), evaluating the results by aid of observations you made after point 3. The dated reference curves, the little dated elm curve and the undated elm sample have to be from the same area.
5) If you are lucky enough, you can obtain some useful deduction and maybe some result too.
6) Since this method is not rigorous and can bring EASILY to incorrect datings, do further and endless verifications. If you are starting now from zero, you can spend years until you can date reasonably the sample.
Anyway, you have to be sure your undated sample is elm, and it aids if you know approximately when the sculpture you are trying to date was made. Probably you already took in account this, but I would pay attention to the context too: may it be an imported sculpture? From where?
Document yourself about dendrochronological characteristics of elm, even from other regions, especially looking for interspecific correlations values (sorry, I never touched elms data). Finally, you probably already know that possibilities of correct dating are proportional (among others parameters) to the number of samples forming your undated curve.
Hope this is sufficient to start. I’m sorry if this reply looks too doctrinaire (and surely I’m not the adequate one...), but you told you was starting with dendrochronology. It’s just a suggestion and the process described could be refined. You can have an overview of Italian dendrochronology status (and, by the way, you can convert to digital data some published long chronology) reading papers by Franco Biondi (search the web for pdf of him), although they are from early '90 and I think elm is not quoted.
Saluti,
Ale
After a superficial and really fast search in the web, effectively elm seems to be a poor studied species under dendroarchaeological point of view, or at least free-access data seems to be hard to obtain. I found just one sample of elm from Italy (http://dendro.cornell.edu/reports/report2000.pdf): sadly it’s a protohistoric sample and furthermore it’s not dated because of some problems during growing. Anyway maybe you can find some curves googling in different languages and searching in real libraries.
If you don’t have a reference curve of the species you are interesting in, here goes, just as suggestion, a personal, absolutely inelegant, “protocol”:
1) Search for at least one dated curve of elm from northern Italy, Alps, etc… It have not to be necessarily in digital format: you can convert published diagrams by using the coorecorder facility. Look also for ecological-related papers: often they have short curves, too short for dating purposes but useful by the point of view of this personal method. If you don’t find any, sample yourself a little curve.
2) Search in all databases (two more: http://dendrodb.cerege.fr/ and http://www.wsl.ch/dendro/dendrodb.html) and in published papers all the curves near the zone from which is your little elm dated curve.
3) Play with the data for revealing better correspondence between elm and other species in the same area.
4) Do a “massive attack” comparing all curves you have collected with your undated curve (you can find examples of the process in Lars-Ake’s site, under "Miscellaneous" section), evaluating the results by aid of observations you made after point 3. The dated reference curves, the little dated elm curve and the undated elm sample have to be from the same area.
5) If you are lucky enough, you can obtain some useful deduction and maybe some result too.
6) Since this method is not rigorous and can bring EASILY to incorrect datings, do further and endless verifications. If you are starting now from zero, you can spend years until you can date reasonably the sample.
Anyway, you have to be sure your undated sample is elm, and it aids if you know approximately when the sculpture you are trying to date was made. Probably you already took in account this, but I would pay attention to the context too: may it be an imported sculpture? From where?
Document yourself about dendrochronological characteristics of elm, even from other regions, especially looking for interspecific correlations values (sorry, I never touched elms data). Finally, you probably already know that possibilities of correct dating are proportional (among others parameters) to the number of samples forming your undated curve.
Hope this is sufficient to start. I’m sorry if this reply looks too doctrinaire (and surely I’m not the adequate one...), but you told you was starting with dendrochronology. It’s just a suggestion and the process described could be refined. You can have an overview of Italian dendrochronology status (and, by the way, you can convert to digital data some published long chronology) reading papers by Franco Biondi (search the web for pdf of him), although they are from early '90 and I think elm is not quoted.
Saluti,
Ale
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Re: Elm dating
Hi Francesco,
According to http://www.wsl.ch/dbdendro/species/Deta ... ecies=1098 Elm is not a very good specie for cross dating. It says the Crossdating Index (CDI) is "1", which "indicates a species known to crossdate within and between trees (minor importance to dendrochronology)". So unfortunately there seems to be a good reason why there are no elm (ULGL) references available at the ITRDB.
The only elm-sample I have been in touch with myself, is in the prehistoric dataset from Alvastra (Sweden). There is a short floating oak-chronology and one elm-sample from that site and there is a correlation between them, which was interpreted as a match... The data is digitalized and available in an other post on this forum: http://www.cybis.se/forum/viewtopic.php?p=62#p62. Maybe of some interest to see one example of QUSP-ULSP correlation, even if it is from an other and far distant place and time.
Best regards
Torbjörn
According to http://www.wsl.ch/dbdendro/species/Deta ... ecies=1098 Elm is not a very good specie for cross dating. It says the Crossdating Index (CDI) is "1", which "indicates a species known to crossdate within and between trees (minor importance to dendrochronology)". So unfortunately there seems to be a good reason why there are no elm (ULGL) references available at the ITRDB.
The only elm-sample I have been in touch with myself, is in the prehistoric dataset from Alvastra (Sweden). There is a short floating oak-chronology and one elm-sample from that site and there is a correlation between them, which was interpreted as a match... The data is digitalized and available in an other post on this forum: http://www.cybis.se/forum/viewtopic.php?p=62#p62. Maybe of some interest to see one example of QUSP-ULSP correlation, even if it is from an other and far distant place and time.
Best regards
Torbjörn
Re: Elm dating
Thank you for your precious help.
I'll try and "play" a little, following your tips.
Thanks also for your warm welcome in the dendrochronological community!
Francesco
I'll try and "play" a little, following your tips.
Thanks also for your warm welcome in the dendrochronological community!
Francesco
Re: Elm dating
So maybe a first attempt could pass trough oak correlations. The visual match in the paper quoted by Taxelson seems fine, although I have not yet looked to Taxelson’s interpretation. Anyway it is worth trying, and furthermore there’s plenty of oak chronologies. If you could experiment with oak and just one elm dated curve it would be better.
And, speaking of oak, some members of this forum could be interested in this: http://www.cybis.se/forum/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=35
Regards,
Ale
And, speaking of oak, some members of this forum could be interested in this: http://www.cybis.se/forum/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=35
Regards,
Ale
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 19
- Joined: 28 Dec 2008, 18:39
- Real name: Torbjörn Axelson
- Location: Björbo, Dalarna, Sweden
- Contact:
Re: Elm dating
I did visit Öland (a Baltic island in south east Sweden, from where I already have a lot of oak samples available) last week, and as I saw two elm stumps, I cored them. The result towards local oak chronology/samples) is not very encouraging. Of course this is just one example, and there may be trees which gives better results than those ones.
The oak-collection is available at: http://www.taxelson.se/dendro/OlandQURO.zip. (Also an almost local Pinus collection is avaliable as ITRDB:swed313).
The corr between the two cores are 0.52 (prop2yrs).
The oak-collection is available at: http://www.taxelson.se/dendro/OlandQURO.zip. (Also an almost local Pinus collection is avaliable as ITRDB:swed313).
Code: Select all
2009-04-21 09:56:11 Cybis CDendro, Algorithm: Proportion of last two years growth (2,0,T)
Correlations between available references in OlandQURO.fil and RamsA.d12 (average of two trees)
dated to 2007 with corr >= 0,00 and with overlap >= 60
Results sorted according to decreasing correlation coefficient values.
T- Over
Corr Test lap
all... 0,39 3,26 63 based on 21 members
OlQ73 0,47 4,18 63 2004
OlQ15 0,45 3,88 61 2002
OlQ6b 0,40 3,38 61 2002
OlQ44 0,40 3,38 61 2002
OlQ71a 0,40 3,38 63 2004
OlQ14 0,39 3,20 60 2001
OlQ34a 0,31 2,53 61 2002
OlQ52 0,31 2,52 61 2002
OlQ2 0,29 2,33 61 2002
OlQ33a 0,29 2,29 61 2002
OlQ33b 0,26 2,05 61 2002
OlQ31 0,23 1,78 61 2002
OlQ34b 0,23 1,78 61 2002
GrdsQ15 0,22 1,75 61 2002
OlQ51 0,22 1,73 61 2002
OlQ42 0,21 1,68 61 2002
OlQ32a 0,20 1,56 61 2002
OlQ72 0,18 1,39 63 2004
OlQ32b 0,17 1,33 61 2002
OlQ43 0,08 0,63 61 2002
OlQ41 0,00 0,03 61 2002
The corr between the two cores are 0.52 (prop2yrs).
Code: Select all
RamsA 1 behind Ramsättra röse, Köping sn, Öland ULSP
RamsA 2 Sweden Ulmus sp. 25m 6551N1644E 1941 2007
RamsA 3 T. Axelson
RamsA #### 56º50'33"N, 16º43'33"E
RamsA #### Cores from two, one yr old, elm stumps (Ulmus glabra or Ulmus minor)
RamsA1 1941 139 142 61 98 92 119 126 139 149
RamsA1 1950 230 249 234 255 152 76 166 167 210 278
RamsA1 1960 316 208 104 309 205 194 133 137 116 96
RamsA1 1970 167 492 545 411 432 393 404 475 368 378
RamsA1 1980 504 620 520 374 710 533 486 440 626 439
RamsA1 1990 262 298 210 363 326 342 307 347 668 747
RamsA1 2000 772 509 434 441 353 352 332 611 999
RamsA1 #### Elm stump
RamsA2 1946 223 268 260 214
RamsA2 1950 196 244 214 260 183 194 289 291 224 216
RamsA2 1960 290 318 240 200 162 142 156 246 268 186
RamsA2 1970 221 338 319 250 206 218 192 257 224 161
RamsA2 1980 192 358 210 168 247 348 365 360 459 288
RamsA2 1990 209 232 167 346 360 373 241 368 907 869
RamsA2 2000 653 557 647 613 606 401 258 307 999
RamsA2 #### Elm stump
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