QUB metadata references
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:
(note: QUB1593 seems to be AD 44 /TA)
Roman Londinium. (London)
- Wikipedia (English) article about No_1_Poultry AD 47 (not QUB)
N. England
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, 264 BC-AD 103 (Roman context).
Swan Carr
- sub-fossil oaks from Swan Carr near Durham (northern England) (Long span, 1 Mill. BC) 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, P 171-1781. p.174.
Durham
- Durham (AD 903-1094 - own dating/TA)
Scotland
- M.G.L. Baillie: An Oak Chronology for South Central Scotland Tree Ring Bulletin vol. 37, 1977.
Isle of Man
- Kella Farm [1]
Ireland
Northern Ireland
- Ballinderry, the samples in the range Q9846-Q9895, are oak samples, just south of Portmore Lough to the East of Lough Neagh. These may also need to be treated with some caution because they lie in the Lough Neagh plain and may well have been affected by changes in lake level, i.e. their growth response may be different in some way.[2]
- Dorsey, Declan Hurl, Cormac McSparron and Peter Moore: Data Structure Report: Dorsey, Dorsy, Co. Armagh, CAF DSR 004 (general arch., no dendroch. details) ,
- Navan, Navan (Fort) 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). See also Wikipedia (English) article about Navan_fort, Coordinates:
- Lisbarnet cottage, about 10 miles South East of Belfast. The oaks are bog oaks that had been dug up in the 18th or 19th century and used as roof timbers in a cottage. Quite a common thing in the area, where poor families were concerned.[2]
"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.
- Toomebridge (natural)
- Blackwater (natural)
- Lough Eyes (Crannog)
- Corban Lough (Crannog)
- Mill Lough (Crannog)
Crannogs in northern Ireland
- Island MacHugh. AD 594±9,
- Island MacHugh. AD 627±9
- Mill Lough. AD 552,
- Mill Lough. AD 643±9
- Ross Lough. AD 570±9,
- Ross Lough. AD 614
- Teeshan AD 82 - AD 581, a crannog,
- LODGE, "Hunting Lodge" at NE shore of Cullyhanna Logh, i.e 5 km N of Crossmaglen in county Armagh. 3475+/-75BP, 3305+/-50BP Jennifer Hillam: The Dating of Cullyhanna Hunting Lodge, Irish Archaeological Research Forum, Vol. 3, No. 1 (1976), pp. 17-20
- 1973 Pilcher reports about a floating chronology, probably early centuries of the first millennium AD. Pilcher: Tree-Ring Research in Ireland, Tree-Ring Bulletin, vol. 33, 1973. Containing a map of locations in N. Ireland and 4 mean curves for the floating chronology: Balloo Cottage 1, Teeshan, Mill Lough 3, Allistragh.
- Pilcher et al.: 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.
- 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.
Various
- Marghery, QUB:Q8521M a Dug-out boat from River Blackwater, Co. Armagh C14-dated: GrN-14742 590±20 (BP cal. AD 1300-1410)[3]
N NW Central plain
- Atlone M. G. L. Baillie: Dublin Medieval Dendrochronology, Tree-Ring Bulletin, vol. 37, 1977 Only one sample: QUB:Q1984 AD872-1138
- Crannogs in the area to the west and north-west of the central plain of Ireland. B A Crone: Crannogs and chronologies in Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 123 (1993), 245-54
- Midges Island. AD 570±9 [location?]
- Lough Tamin. AD 584±9 [location?]
- Lough Tamin. Ao618±9
- Moynagh Lough. AD 625 [4]
- Moynagh Lough. AD 748
- Kilnock. AD 722±9 [location?]
Central East coast
Drogheda
- Drogheda [5]
- BathHouse
Dublin
- Clansy [Barracks] (56 files) [6]
- Ormond Quai (4 files)
- Wood Quai (43 files)
- Christchurch Cathedral [5]
- High Street
- Christchurch Place
- Winetavern Street
- Turvey (Castle)
- Oldbawn (House)
- Patrick Street[7]
Southern Ireland coast
Cork
- St Partick's road http://www.corkcity.ie/services/environment/drainage/corkmaindrainage/cmd_past_discovered.PDF
Central South Ireland
- Annaholty bog (Bog bridge about 40 BC) (10 files) Abstracts for Wetland Archaeology in Ireland and Beyond
General
- Ian Tyers, Jennifer Hillam, and Cathy Groves: Trees and woodland in the Saxon period: the dendrochronological evidence (schema on overlapping between the sites building up the English and Irish chronologies)
- List of C14 dated QUB-samples: http://www.chrono.qub.ac.uk/Resources/dendro_data/QUB_Tree_14C.csv (ring number seems counted from oldest ring and outwards)
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. English Heritage: Dendrochronology: Guidelines on producing and interpreting dendrochronological dates (2004)
Notes
- ↑ http://www.chrono.qub.ac.uk/Resources/dendro_data/QUB_Tree_14C.csv WebCite-archive
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 E-mail from M. Baillie to T. Axelson 2011-01-02
- ↑ Email from David Brown to T. Axelson, 2011-01-07
- ↑ John Bradley: Excavations at Moynagh Lough, County Meath, The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, Vol. 121, (1991), pp. 5-26
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 M. G. L. Baillie: Dublin Medieval Dendrochronology, Tree-Ring Bulletin, vol. 37, 1977
- ↑ Abstracts for Wetland Archaeology in Ireland and Beyond
- ↑ Claire Walsh: Archaeological excavations at Patrick, Nicholas & Winetavern streets, Dublin [book]