
Origins 14(1):29-30 (1987).
LITERATURE REVIEW
RADIOCARBON DATING: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE. 1987. R.E. Taylor. Academic Press, Inc., Orlando, Florida. 212 pp.
As the title implies, this book was written for individuals who wish
to understand radiocarbon dating, but do not have a strong background in physical science.
The author is eminently qualified to provide both breadth and depth in a treatment of
radiocarbon dating. He is currently professor of anthropology and director of the
Radiocarbon Laboratory, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, at the University
of California, Riverside. While a graduate student at the University of California, Los
Angeles, he served as a research assistant in the isotope laboratory established by the
late Willard F. Libby who developed the radiocarbon dating concept and pioneered the
associated laboratory techniques.
The text is amply illustrated and written in a clear, easily readable
style. There is a broad discussion of techniques, as well as of the basic principles on
which these techniques are based. Explanations from elementary principles are provided for
readers who wish to understand the technical details. Extensive references provide easy
access to the original literature. A reader who goes through the book rapidly will notice
some repetition repetition that provides for ease of understanding when interest
may be limited to only a particular section or chapter.
Throughout the book, particularly in Chapter 5 ("Evaluation of
Radiocarbon Data"), Dr. Taylor gives a thorough discussion of the difficulties and
uncertainties in the translation of a C-14 measurement into an estimate of real-time
calendric age. In Chapter 2 (p. 16) he states, "The minimum overall level of
uncertainty for an individual C-14 age estimate for middle and late Holocene [less than
6000 years old] samples is about 200 years." For many individuals these discussions
are worth more than the cost of the entire book.
The final chapter (No. 6) gives a highly interesting history of the
development of radiocarbon dating from the first suggestion concerning the existence of
C-14 that was made in 1934 to the death of Willard Libby in 1980.
The author and publisher are to be commended for a first edition
remarkably free of errors. I can cite only two of any significance. In Figure 2:12 on page
33 the lower horizontal line designated "ca. 410 yrs" should extend to the
extreme right vertical dashed line, not only to the vertical solid line at which the
"ca. 265 yrs" horizontal line terminates. In each of the first two examples on
page 138 the last line above "Age range" should be "years B.C.", not
"years B.P."
Dr. Taylor's book meets a long-standing need for an up-to-date,
comprehensive, authoritative and succinct treatment of radiocarbon dating.
All contents copyright
Geoscience Research Institute. All rights reserved.
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