By
Dr. Elisabetta Boaretto
Department of Environmental Science
& Energy Research (ESER)
Radiocarbon Dating Laboratory
RADIOCARBON DATING
Radiocarbon dating determines the concentration of 14C relative to 12C in the
material analyzed, and from this result the 14C age in year BP (Before
Present) is calculated and calibrated to historical years.
Of the two items here considered, Jehoash tablet and James Ossuary, only the
Jehoash tablet was analyzed for 14C by the Beta Analytic Laboratory (USA).
Jehoash Tablet
1. Sample collection
The tablet of Jehoash was brought to the Israel Museum for identification and
to recover material that could be submitted for radiocarbon dating.
The Director of the Israel Museum Chemistry Laboratory for Restoration (SIMIA),
Dr. David Bigelajzen, scraped from the letters part of the patina. He found
that this patina was very soft and easy to remove. The amount recovered from
the letters was considered too small for the radiocarbon determination and
more patina was scraped from the side and from the back of the tablet. No
attempt was made to keep separated the two different patinas.
All the material was sent to Beta Analytic Laboratory (Florida, USA). The date
obtained was 2250±40 year BP which calibrated (±2σ, 95% probability)
corresponds to the interval 390-200 BC.
2. Dating material from the tablet
The best available material for dating, represented by the patina inside the
letters, is a mixture of pure clay mixed with chalk and some carbonized
material (see Prof. Yuval Goren’s report).
These three types of material could have been separated chemically,
mechanically and/or by heavy liquids and measured for the radiocarbon content.
The three dates would have been the radiocarbon ages of the material, but the
relation to the time the inscription would need some interpretation.
a. Chalk comes from a geological formation and therefore is beyond the range
of 14C (50,000 year BP). This material is therefore not related to the
inscription.
b. Clay particles may contain organic matter, whose formation and inclusion in
the clay are unrelated to the time of the inscription. Therefore this organic
matter can be either older or younger than the inscription and therefore its
age is not significant for the tablet. In this case knowing the context and
the sediments where the tablet was found would have been helpful for the
control.
c. Carbonized particles: these were probably the final material dated by Beta
Analytic. Their report mentions that the material (patina) provided enough
carbon for a good dating. No more details are given. The conventional
radiocarbon age was 2250±40 year BP which calibrated (2σ, 95% probability)
390-200 BC. This result post-dates the assumed time the inscription was made
(9th century BC). This might be regarded as support for the authenticity of
the tablet, as the tablet should have been written before. But as the
archaeological context is not known, the possibility that the charcoal is a
recent addition (on purpose) cannot be excluded. This last hypothesis is
supported by the characterization and composition of the patina provided by
Prof. Yuval Goren.
A general conclusion is that radiocarbon dating of the patina on the Jeohash
tablet does not give a conclusive proof to the authenticity of the
inscription.
James Ossuary
In the case of the James Ossuary the task for radiocarbon would be to try to
date the varnish or the patina on the Ossuary and inside the letters.
With the evidence that the inscription cut through the natural patina and
varnish present around the ossuary, and with the type of “patina” identified
by Prof. Goren inside the letters, the dating would not be significant for the
authenticity. The chalk seen inside most of the letters is not an ideal
material for dating and for answering this type of question.
I would therefore consider it very difficult to have any definitive proof of
the authenticity of the inscription on the ossuary based on the radiocarbon
dating of this type of material.
Conclusion
The radiocarbon dating provided the age of the material analyzed. Based on the
characterization of the material examined in Jehoash Tablet and James Ossuary,
the 14C content would not have supplied a proof of authenticity.
For both items it should be also considered that the exposure of the items to
the atmosphere, in different environments would increase the risk of
contamination with modern 14C and consequently add more uncertainty to the
interpretation of the results. This should be kept in mind in the future, when
considering how to treat and preserve items like these.
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