For at least 100,000 yr, marine shell beads have been important ornamental and symbolic artifacts intimately associated with the behavior of anatomically modern humans. In California, giant rock scallop (Hinnites multirugosus) beads were once thought to have been used only for the last 1000 yr, where they were considered to be markers of high social status among the Chumash Indians of the Santa Barbara Channel region. Direct accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dating of 1 giant rock scallop ornament and 2 beads from San Miguel Island extends the use of this shell for personal adornment to at least 8000 cal BP. Our study emphasizes the importance of direct AMS 14C dating of artifacts to enhance cultural chronologies and clarify t...
In the early 1900s thirteen engraved Conus shell valuables were dug from prehistoric midden mounds i...
Local reservoir ages are often estimated from the difference between the radiocarbon ages of aquatic...
Radiocarbon dating is used across a wide range of scientific disciplines including archaeology, fore...
Pearl shell was an important and highly valued resource for producing tools and ornaments in Oceania...
We demonstrate variable radiocarbon content within 2 historic (AD 1936) and 2 prehistoric (about 820...
In central California, a sequence of late Holocene cultural phases has long been recognized through ...
We provide detailed contextual information on 25 14C dates for unusually well-preserved archaeologic...
This paper presents a set of accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates obtained from var...
This article presents a set of Late Pleistocene marine mollusk radiocarbon (AMS) age estimates of 30...
Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates (n=20) determined on fish otoliths from mullow...
Accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dates for nine shell beads and two shell ornaments are used to t...
The conventional 14C ages of 8 marine shells of known age and 11 marine shells stratigraphically ass...
The remains of shellfish dominate many coastal archaeological sites in the Pacific and provide a wea...
This article presents a set of Late Pleistocene marine mollusk radiocarbon (AMS) age estimates of 30...
The remains of shellfish dominate many coastal archaeological sites in the Pacific and provide a wea...
In the early 1900s thirteen engraved Conus shell valuables were dug from prehistoric midden mounds i...
Local reservoir ages are often estimated from the difference between the radiocarbon ages of aquatic...
Radiocarbon dating is used across a wide range of scientific disciplines including archaeology, fore...
Pearl shell was an important and highly valued resource for producing tools and ornaments in Oceania...
We demonstrate variable radiocarbon content within 2 historic (AD 1936) and 2 prehistoric (about 820...
In central California, a sequence of late Holocene cultural phases has long been recognized through ...
We provide detailed contextual information on 25 14C dates for unusually well-preserved archaeologic...
This paper presents a set of accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates obtained from var...
This article presents a set of Late Pleistocene marine mollusk radiocarbon (AMS) age estimates of 30...
Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates (n=20) determined on fish otoliths from mullow...
Accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dates for nine shell beads and two shell ornaments are used to t...
The conventional 14C ages of 8 marine shells of known age and 11 marine shells stratigraphically ass...
The remains of shellfish dominate many coastal archaeological sites in the Pacific and provide a wea...
This article presents a set of Late Pleistocene marine mollusk radiocarbon (AMS) age estimates of 30...
The remains of shellfish dominate many coastal archaeological sites in the Pacific and provide a wea...
In the early 1900s thirteen engraved Conus shell valuables were dug from prehistoric midden mounds i...
Local reservoir ages are often estimated from the difference between the radiocarbon ages of aquatic...
Radiocarbon dating is used across a wide range of scientific disciplines including archaeology, fore...