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Research Publication

Minimally Destructive Radiocarbon Dating of Bone.

Higham Tom, T Luftensteiner, Katharina K et al.

41614447 PubMed ID
30 Authors
2026-05-15 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HT
Higham Tom
TL
T Luftensteiner
KK
Katharina K
VD
van der Sluis Laura
LG
L Giannì
MM
Maddalena M
WM
Wiegele Maria
MP
M Papadogianni
AA
Anastasia A
SP
Steier Peter
PG
P Gruber
DD
Daniela D
SB
Schmidt Brigitte
BS
B Schmidt
KK
Katy K
BA
Belinski Andrei
AM
A Mensan
RR
Romain R
KM
Kozlikin Maxim
MS
M Shunkov
MM
Michael M
NP
Neruda Petr
PN
P Nerudová
ZZ
Zdeňka Z
HB
Horejs Barbara
BS
B Schulze
JJ
John J
DK
Douka Katerina
KS
K Stafford
TW
Thomas W TW
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Bone is commonly used in radiocarbon dating in archaeology and other disciplines. Despite advances in collagen extraction protocols, the process remains destructive, requiring sawing, drilling or crushing of bone material. While non-destructive approaches have recently been applied in ancient genomics and palaeoproteomics, no equivalent approach has been established for radiocarbon dating of bone. We explored whether this is possible using a series of experiments.We experimented by using a water-based approach to extract soluble collagen from whole bone and teeth samples. We heated the samples in hot (75°C and 90°C) water for several hours. We obtained the soluble collagen fraction of the bone and purified and AMS dated the extracts. We used standard reference bones and samples from archaeological sites.We found that the amino acid composition, C/N atomic ratios, δ13C and δ15N values of the hot-water-extracted soluble collagen were comparable to collagen isolated from the same bones using classic Longin collagen methods. Bone and teeth from Bronze Age and Middle and Upper Paleolithic sites, which had been dated previously using routine destructive methods that involved acid demineralization, yielded dates on the water-soluble fraction that were in good agreement with these earlier results.We show that a minimally destructive collagen extraction, coupled with an additional purification step such as ultrafiltration or XAD-2 purification, yields identical radiocarbon ages to those obtained via the routine destructive methods, but without any visible external damage. The method may allow us in future to date precious artefacts, ornaments and museum objects without significant alteration.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment