QUB metadata references: Difference between revisions
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==England== | ==England== | ||
*An English Tree-Ring Chronology, A.D. 404-1216 (JENNIFER HILLAM) http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/arch-769-1/ahds/dissemination/pdf/vol25/25_031_044.pdf | *An English Tree-Ring Chronology, A.D. 404-1216 (JENNIFER HILLAM) http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/arch-769-1/ahds/dissemination/pdf/vol25/25_031_044.pdf | ||
*An English chronology 434 BC - AD 315 mentioned by http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/ | *An English chronology 434 BC - AD 315 mentioned by [http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/publications/dendrochronology-guidelines/dendrochronology.pdf/ English Heritage: Dendrochronology: Guidelines on producing and interpreting dendrochronological dates (2004)] (but by almost no others). | ||
===Alchester=== | ===Alchester=== |
Revision as of 09:54, 21 May 2010
Here is the place to list text which clarify the geographical origin for sets of QUB-files.
England
- An English Tree-Ring Chronology, A.D. 404-1216 (JENNIFER HILLAM) http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/arch-769-1/ahds/dissemination/pdf/vol25/25_031_044.pdf
- An English chronology 434 BC - AD 315 mentioned by English Heritage: Dendrochronology: Guidelines on producing and interpreting dendrochronological dates (2004) (but by almost no others).
Alchester
- "There is a key dendrochronological date from a gatepost timber at Alchester which demonstrates that this structure was probably built in AD 44 (Sauer 2001, 72) and thus provides not only the earliest secure independent dating for a military feature anywhere in Roman Britain but also a key starting point for understanding the Roman conquest of the region and the early development of the complex sequence at Alchester itself." http://www.buckscc.gov.uk/assets/content/bcc/docs/archaeology/A_ST_Oxford_5_solent_thames_roman_oxon_jan_08.pdf p.4
See also Wikipedia (English) article about Alchester_Roman_Town. Location:
Carlisle
- Wikipedia (English) article about Luguvalium (AD 72, AD 165?),
- 3 collections without overlap(?) can be created out of the QUB-material: AD 1063-1600, AD 467-770, Undated 367 years.
Roman Londinium. (London)
- Wikipedia (English) article about No_1_Poultry AD 47 (not QUB)
England medieval
- Durham (AD 903-1094 - own dating/TA)
Ireland
- Navan and Dorsey are supposed to overlap in the 6th-1st centuries BC, running from 575-95BC (Baillie & Brown, 'Dendrochronology of Irish Bog Trackways', pp.395-402 in B. Raftery (ed), Trackway Excavations in the Mountdillon Bogs, Co. Longford, 1985-1991 (Irish Archaeological Wetland Unit Transactions Vol.3, 1996), fig.504).
Dublin
- Clansy [Barracks] (56 files) Abstracts for Wetland Archaeology in Ireland and Beyond
- Ormond Quai (4 files)Abstracts for Wetland Archaeology in Ireland and Beyond
- Wood Quai (43 files) Abstracts for Wetland Archaeology in Ireland and Beyond
Central South Ireland
- Annaholty bog (Bog bridge about 40 BC) (10 files) Abstracts for Wetland Archaeology in Ireland and Beyond
N NW Central plain
- Crannogs in the area to the west and north-west of the central plain of Ireland. http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/PSAS_2002/pdf/vol_123/123_245_254.pdf
- Island MacHugh. AD 594ą9
- Island MacHugh. AD 627ą9
- Midges Island. AD 570ą9
- Mill Lough. AD 552
- Mill Lough. AD 643ą9
- Ross Lough. AD 570ą9
- Ross Lough. AD 614
- Lough Tamin. AD 584ą9
- Lough Tamin. Ao618ą9
- Teeshan. AD 581
- Teeshan. AD 543ą9
- Moynagh Lough. AD 625
- Moynagh Lough. AD 748
- Kilnock. AD 722ą9
Northern Ireland
- LODGE, "Hunting Lodge" at NE shore of Cullyhanna Logh, i.e 5 km N of Crossmaglen in county Armagh. 3475+/-75BP, 3305+/-50BP http://www.jstor.org/pss/20495233
General
Problems
- No Irish oaks found during 95-13 BC!: Baillie 1995 p. 56
- No English oaks AD 316-403! For the historic period there is now a continuous sequence that runs from the present back to AD 404, and another from Roman contexts covering 434 BC – AD 315. The latter is still reliant on cross-links with Ireland and Germany for its dating since no English tree-ring sequence has been found that spans the fourth century AD. http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/upload/pdf/Dendrochronology.pdf