Carbon dating converter INTCAL09

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The discussion centers on the reliability and methodology of carbon dating, emphasizing the importance of understanding its limitations. Carbon dating is a valid method for estimating the age of organic materials up to 50,000 years, but calibration is crucial and is regularly updated. Users are encouraged to utilize calibration software like Calib, Calpal, and Oxcal, although some may not reflect the latest calibration tables. The calibration curve can exhibit significant variations due to historical fluctuations in 14C concentrations, leading to potential errors in age estimates, particularly in flat sections of the curve where a single 14C date can correspond to a wide range of real dates. An improved carbon dating converter tool has been shared, which alerts users to potential errors associated with carbon platforms, allowing for more accurate interpretations of 14C dates. The tool incorporates Marine09 data for those working with marine organisms and invites collaboration for further enhancements.
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We did several threads about carbon dating. Main message, you've got to know what the caveats are and then it's a good and reliable way to estimate the age of organic material from the last 50,000 years.

A major point is calibration, which is improved and refined every few years. There is software around on the net to facilitate calibration, like Calib, Calpal, Oxcal etc. The problem is that it's sometimes not updated with the latest calibration table and another problem is, handling of carbon dating platforms. I see that the wiki does not elaborate, but due to relatively large changes of 14C concentrations in the past, the calibration curve has steeper and flatter parts. In the flat - near horizontal parts a 14C date can enclose a large real date range, introducing a large error.

So I made a bit of an improved version of my good old http://dl.dropbox.com/u/22026080/carbon-dating-converter-intcal09-02.xlsx that warns if it finds a 'platform'. It's in my dropbox, for anybody who wants to try it. Of course, tearing it down to pieces is welcomed, so that we could make an improved one.

Just enter the 14C date in B1 and either the error range in D1 or a basic error percentage in B2, or no error at all.

Enter for instance 10000 (14C years) and the output is 11395 Cal years BP (before present) +/- 5 (indicating the interval in which the value is chosen). However enter 10020 years and we see a carbon platform with the output 11500 Cal yars BP +/- 100 years, giving an impression of the length of platform.

You can find how it's done, in the second tab, 'intcal09table'.
 
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I added Marine09 data, just in case you were about to date those mollusks.
 
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