Archaeomagnetic directional dating of several
Scottish sites has been undertaken by extensive sampling
of large, physically stable vitrified exposures.
Isothermal remanences and the demagnetisation patterns
isolated using alternating magnetic fields and thermal
methods, show that vitrification occurred under limited
oxidation at temperatures >600°C and that the
vitrification was physically stable below 600°C at all but
one of the sampled structures. Remanence directions were
isolated by demagnetisation techniques and show that these
sampled forts and duns collectively span a period from the
late 3rd century B.C. to 5th century A.D. Calibration of
mean magnetic directions shows general consistency with
14c dating but not with thermoluminescence dates. An
archaeomagnetic curve of "best fit" incorporating all
dating methods largely confirms the previous Iron Age
secular variation curve. Field observations, systematic
sampling and magnetic measurement of features of various
archaeological ages, as well as an experimental kiln, has
shown that there are both random and systematic
directional deviations which do not precisely correlate
with other magnetic properties. These deviations are
thought to be due to more complex factors than that
suggested by standard refraction corrections and appear to
be attributable to not only magnetic distortions through
already cooled magnetic materials but also complex
localised magnetic interactions during cooling. Magnetic
heterogeneity can contribute toward randomising such
effects. Movement on cooling was insignificant in most
cases whilst fabric anisotropy did not cause significant
magnetic deflections. Systematic and preferential sampling
of rapidly cooled areas gives the most consistent results,
although mean magnetic directions from slowly cooled and
magnetically heterogeneous structures can also give well
defined magnetic directions.
Date of Award | 1989 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Archaeomagnetic Directional Studies Of Large Fired Structures In Britain
Gentles, D. S. (Author). 1989
Student thesis: PhD