Carbon Dating: What Do The Experts Think?
Carbon Dating can best be summed-up with the following statement by T. Save-Sodebergh and I.U. Olsson (Institute of Egyptology and Institute of Physics, respectively, University of Uppsala, Sweden) in their publication, C-14 Dating and Egyptian Chronology in Radiocarbon: "If a C-14 date supports our theories, we put it in the main text. If it does not entirely contradict them, we put it in a footnote. And if it is completely 'out of date' we just drop it." This illustrates the fact that accepted carbon dates are not necessarily accurate dates -- they are merely selected dates. "It should be no surprise, then, that fully half of the dates are rejected. The wonder is, surely, that the remaining half come to be accepted" (Robert E. Lee, "Radiocarbon, Ages in Error," Anthropological Journal of Canada, Vol. 19, No.3, 1981, pp.9, 29).
Carbon Dating can best be summed-up with the following statement by T. Save-Sodebergh and I.U. Olsson (Institute of Egyptology and Institute of Physics, respectively, University of Uppsala, Sweden) in their publication, C-14 Dating and Egyptian Chronology in Radiocarbon: "If a C-14 date supports our theories, we put it in the main text. If it does not entirely contradict them, we put it in a footnote. And if it is completely 'out of date' we just drop it." This illustrates the fact that accepted carbon dates are not necessarily accurate dates -- they are merely selected dates. "It should be no surprise, then, that fully half of the dates are rejected. The wonder is, surely, that the remaining half come to be accepted" (Robert E. Lee, "Radiocarbon, Ages in Error," Anthropological Journal of Canada, Vol. 19, No.3, 1981, pp.9, 29).
