QUB metadata references: Difference between revisions

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*Pilcher et al.: [http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119628283/abstract A Long Sub-Fossil Oak Tree-Ring Chronology from the North of Ireland], New Pytol. (1977) 79, 713-729 (Abstract) The full article contains the mean curve.  
*Pilcher et al.: [http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119628283/abstract A Long Sub-Fossil Oak Tree-Ring Chronology from the North of Ireland], New Pytol. (1977) 79, 713-729 (Abstract) The full article contains the mean curve.  
*[http://digitalcommons.library.arizona.edu/objectviewer?o=http%3A%2F%2Fradiocarbon.library.arizona.edu%2FVolume25%2FNumber2%2Fazu_radiocarbon_v25_n2_171_178_v.pdf M G L Baillie, J R Pilcher, and G W Pearson: ''Dendrochronology at Belfast as a background to High-Precision Calibration''], Radiocarbon, Vol 25, No. 2, 1983. The structure of the BC-chronology described.
*[http://digitalcommons.library.arizona.edu/objectviewer?o=http%3A%2F%2Fradiocarbon.library.arizona.edu%2FVolume25%2FNumber2%2Fazu_radiocarbon_v25_n2_171_178_v.pdf M G L Baillie, J R Pilcher, and G W Pearson: ''Dendrochronology at Belfast as a background to High-Precision Calibration''], Radiocarbon, Vol 25, No. 2, 1983. The structure of the BC-chronology described.
====Two first centuries AD material====
The Oak chronology for Ireland is, based on the QUB-material, possible to build continuously and with good quality down to about 100 AD, and than a rather tiny tail down to 13 BC (Mill Lough {{QUB|Q218}}). Another complex of Irish chronologies ends at 69 BC with the Annaholty Bog (Tipperary). That complex can be dated towards the English roman time complex, which is dated towards the continental European roman time complex. The problem is that the quality of the link between the present time chronologies down to about fourth century AD and the whole European roman time complex is of disputable quality. Therefore an indisputable link between the Irish AD-chronology and the English Roman time complex would have been very welcome but unfortunately this link, so far, is too weak to confirm the date accepted for Roman complex.
The sites in QUB forming the old end of the present time Irish chronology are:
* Allistragh, AD 39 - 337 (>2 samples from AD 97) (natural, bog oak?)
* Ballinderry, AD 25 - 618 (>2 samples from AD 110) meta data missing, but possibly anthropogenic remains (and likely the "Ballinderry" in Antrim county)
* Balloo, AD 17 - 312 (>2 samples from AD 52) (probably bog oaks, found reused in a rather modern building)
* Teeshan, AD 82 - 581 (>2 samples from AD 144) Crannog
* Mill Lough, 13 BC - AD 611 (>2 samples from AD 37) (natural, bog oak?)


===N NW Central plain===
===N NW Central plain===

Revision as of 12:52, 3 December 2010

Here is the place to list text which clarify the geographical origin for sets of QUB-files.

England

Alchester

See also Wikipedia (English) article about Alchester_Roman_Town. Location: 51°52′42″N 1°10′10″W

Roman Londinium. (London)

  • Wikipedia (English) article about No_1_Poultry AD 47 (not QUB)

N. England

Carlisle

Swan Carr

Durham

Scotland

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).

Northern Ireland

"BELIM"

The "BELIM" masterchronology AD 1001-1970 is described (containing also data for the Master Chronology) in Michael G. L. Baillie: The Belfast Oak Chronology to AD 1001, Tree-Ring Bulletin, vol. 37, 1977 (Geocoord data approximately according to map in the article). It is also available among the East Anglia Incident chronology files. The younger part of this chronology, however, was described in Baillie: A Recently Developed Irish Tree-ring Chronology, Tree-Ring Bulletin, vol. 33, 1973. pp. 15-28.

Crannogs in northern Ireland

Two first centuries AD material

The Oak chronology for Ireland is, based on the QUB-material, possible to build continuously and with good quality down to about 100 AD, and than a rather tiny tail down to 13 BC (Mill Lough QUB:Q218). Another complex of Irish chronologies ends at 69 BC with the Annaholty Bog (Tipperary). That complex can be dated towards the English roman time complex, which is dated towards the continental European roman time complex. The problem is that the quality of the link between the present time chronologies down to about fourth century AD and the whole European roman time complex is of disputable quality. Therefore an indisputable link between the Irish AD-chronology and the English Roman time complex would have been very welcome but unfortunately this link, so far, is too weak to confirm the date accepted for Roman complex.

The sites in QUB forming the old end of the present time Irish chronology are:

  • Allistragh, AD 39 - 337 (>2 samples from AD 97) (natural, bog oak?)
  • Ballinderry, AD 25 - 618 (>2 samples from AD 110) meta data missing, but possibly anthropogenic remains (and likely the "Ballinderry" in Antrim county)
  • Balloo, AD 17 - 312 (>2 samples from AD 52) (probably bog oaks, found reused in a rather modern building)
  • Teeshan, AD 82 - 581 (>2 samples from AD 144) Crannog
  • Mill Lough, 13 BC - AD 611 (>2 samples from AD 37) (natural, bog oak?)

N NW Central plain

Central East coast

Drogheda

53°42′N 6°21′W

  • Drogheda [2]
  • BathHouse

Dublin

53°21′N 6°16′W

Southern Ireland coast

Cork

Central South Ireland

General


Problems

Notes