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Tephrochronology×Datación por radiocarbono×
CampoArqueologíaGeofísica
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen19441949
Autor originalSigurdur ThorarinssonWillard Libby
TipoVolcanic marker dating techniqueChronometric method based on ¹⁴C decay
Fuente seminalThorarinsson, S. (1944). Tefrokronologiska studier på Island. Geografiska Annaler, 26(1-2), 1-217. link ↗Libby, W. F. (1949). Radiocarbon dating. University of Chicago Press. link ↗
Aliastephra chronology, volcanic ash dating¹⁴C dating, Carbon-14 dating
Relacionados43
ResumenTephrochronology is a chronometric and stratigraphic technique that uses volcanic ash layers (tephra) as time markers to date and correlate archaeological and geological deposits. Pioneered by Icelandic geologist Sigurdur Thorarinsson in 1944, it exploits the fact that large explosive volcanic eruptions deposit distinctive ash layers across vast geographic regions instantaneously in geological time. Each tephra layer serves as a chronological marker horizon that can be identified, characterized, and dated, enabling archaeologists to synchronize deposits across multiple sites.Radiocarbon dating is a radiometric technique that determines the age of organic materials by measuring the radioactive decay of ¹⁴C (carbon-14), a rare isotope produced in the atmosphere by cosmic ray interactions. Developed by Willard Libby in 1949, radiocarbon dating became a foundational method in archaeology, paleoclimate studies, and geology, enabling dating of organic materials from the past ~50,000 years with typical precision of ±50–100 years.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Tephrochronology · Radiocarbon Dating. Recuperado el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare