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      Radiocarbon Calibration and Analysis of Stratigraphy: The OxCal Program

      Radiocarbon
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          People usually study the chronologies of archaeological sites and geological sequences using many different kinds of evidence, taking into account calibrated radiocarbon dates, other dating methods and stratigraphic information. Many individual case studies demonstrate the value of using statistical methods to combine these different types of information. I have developed a computer program, OxCal, running under Windows 3.1 (for IBM PCs), that will perform both 14C calibration and calculate what extra information can be gained from stratigraphic evidence. The program can perform automatic wiggle matches and calculate probability distributions for samples in sequences and phases. The program is written in C++ and uses Bayesian statistics and Gibbs sampling for the calculations. The program is very easy to use, both for simple calibration and complex site analysis, and will produce graphical output from virtually any printer.

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          Calibration of radiocarbon results pertaining to related archaeological events

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            Combining archaeological and radiocarbon information: a Bayesian approach to calibration

            A recent and significant improvement in radiocarbon dating has been the increased ability of the radiocarbon laboratories to provide results combining precision with accuracy. This improvement has been accompanied by increasing recognition that the information must be expressed on the calendar, rather than on the radiocarbon, time-scale. Despite the attempts of Ottaway (1987) and Pearson (1987), archaeologists are not sufficiently aware of the statistical problems involved in the transformation from one scale to the other: ‘Some of the trouble lies in the ignorance of radiocarbon consumers; the many attempts to educate them can have only limited success when radiocarbon study depends on statistical concepts and methods far beyond the average archaeologist’s innumerate grasp’ (Chippindale 1990: 203).
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              applab
              Radiocarbon
              Radiocarbon
              Cambridge University Press (CUP)
              0033-8222
              1945-5755
              1995
              July 2016
              : 37
              : 02
              : 425-430
              Article
              10.1017/S0033822200030903
              59dc9a89-557c-4f2a-836f-26c29412d8c7
              © 1995
              History

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