Charles Explorer logo
🇬🇧

Clustering of calibrated radiocarbon dates: Site-specific chronological sequences identified by dense radiocarbon sampling

Publication at Central Library of Charles University, Faculty of Arts |
2020

Abstract

Calibrated radiocarbon (14C) determinations are commonly used in archaeology to assign calendar dates to a site's chronological phases identified based on additional evidence such as stratigraphy. In the absence of such evidence, we can perform dense 14C sampling of the site to attempt to identify periods of heightened activity, separated by periods of inactivity, which correspond to archaeological phases and gaps between them.

We propose a method to achieve this by hierarchical cluster analysis of the calibrated 14C dates, followed by testing of the different clustering solutions for consistency based on silhouette coefficient and statistical significance using randomization. Separate events identified in such a way can then be regarded as evidence for distinct phases of activity and used to construct a site-specific sequence.

This can be in turn used as a Bayesian prior to further narrow down the distributions of the calibrated 14C dates. We assessed the validity of the method using simulated data as well as real-life archaeological data from the Bronze Age settlement of Troy.