Posted on 05/15/2008 4:01:32 PM PDT by blam
Radiocarbon Dating of Malibu Artifacts Confirms Importance of Farpoint Site
National Science Foundation and Smithsonian Officials Are Among Those Urging Preservation and Additional Archaeological Research at Point Dume Property
BY ANNE SOBLE
Archaeologist Gary Stickel announced at a recent lecture at the Malibu Public Library that a stone spearhead, or point, found at a local construction site by a Native American project monitor in 2005 has been established as an artifact from the oldest archaeological find in the City of Malibu. Radiocarbon dating of mussel shell fragments from the site that was provided gratis by the National Science Foundation at the Accelerator Mass Spectrometer Laboratory at the University of Arizona dates them to 9074 BP (Before Present).
The shells would have been brought to the site, Dr. Stickel says, by the areas prehistoric inhabitants, ancestors of the Chumash, the earliest recorded Native Americans who inhabited much of the immediate coastal area, including Malibu.
The archaeologist and his research associate, James Flaherty, indicate that the shell samples were found above the level where the spearhead, believed to be a Clovis era artifact, representing the oldest identifiable culture in the New World, was found. The date that Clovis people might have occupied the site has not been established, but proponents of their presence think they could have inhabited Malibu from 12,500 to 11,000 years ago.
Stickel says that Edgar Perezs find of the spearhead, unearthed during construction work on private property on Point Dume, is a major archaeological discovery of almost unlimited significance.
The ebullient archaeologist, who dispenses copies of a letter confirming his role as an archaeological consultant for the film Raiders of the Lost Ark the way other PhDs provide CVs, says the Farpoint site, as the property is known, keeps yielding new secrets that are important to learning about the people who lived in Malibu 9000 and more years ago.
Stickel says, There is vital additional work to be done at the site. The current property owner prohibits further excavation, but Stickel hopes to raise the funds to acquire the site and permanently protect it. He adds, Additional excavation could provide human teeth or bone material that could [corroborate] theories of human habitation.
Dennis Stanford, the chief archaeologist at the Smithsonian Institution and a Clovis era expert, says Farpoint is a site of national significance and requires interdisciplinary research and protection.
A growing chorus of archaeological voices supports additional exploration of the site that some say could hold the key to where the people who inhabited the western coastal areas originated.
Stickel has urged the public to take greater interest in the find and rally behind the call for more research. He is critical of what he describes as a lack of interest by Malibu municipal officials in local archaeology. Farpoints champion says, Unfortunately, the City of Malibu is not following the recommendations of Dr. Stanford and has done nothing to protect and preserve this special site.
GGG Ping.
Wait till Q shows up.
Rofl! @ obscure TNG reference :D
Yeah, I'm dating myself (because no one else will date me)!
what happened to “AD”?
That ‘Farpoint” show was awful........
I -AM- somebody!
Paging Jim Rockford, paging Jim Rockford...
Reality calling, people... carbon dating has been proven invalid... look it up...
C-14 dating is valid, accurate within its limits and becoming more accurate all the time with continuing research.
They don't specify what this date represents. Is this the measured age, the conventional age, or the calibrated intercept?
The answer to that question can make a difference of a couple of thousand years.
In either case, they indicate that this date has little relation to the age of the point; this date would represent a minimum age, which in this case is of little value. Clovis is clearly much older.
No need to look it up--I work with radiocarbon dating on nearly a daily basis. I have written monographs and delivered papers on the subject. I selected another sample to submit today, and I have three being processed at the moment. This will bring my total number of samples submitted to nearly 600.
Plus, I am probably more familiar with the creationist literature on radiocarbon dating than you are, as well.
So, please inform me as to how "carbon dating has been proven invalid" -- I eagerly await your reply.
In the meantime, here are some useful links for anyone who wants accurate data on the subject:
ReligiousTolerance.org Carbon-14 Dating (C-14): Beliefs of New-Earth CreationistsRadiometric Dating: A Christian Perspective by Dr. Roger C. Wiens.
This site, BiblicalChronologist.org has a series of good articles on radiocarbon dating.
Are tree-ring chronologies reliable? (The Biblical Chronologist, Vol. 5, No. 1)
Tree Ring and C14 DatingHow does the radiocarbon dating method work? (The Biblical Chronologist, Vol. 5, No. 1)
How precise is radiocarbon dating?
Is radiocarbon dating based on assumptions?
Has radiocarbon dating been invalidated by unreasonable results?
Radiocarbon WEB-info Radiocarbon Laboratory, University of Waikato, New Zealand.
Those guys knew good real estate when they saw it.
With lower ocean levels at that time, I expect it'd be quite a bit inland, not beach front property.
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Thanks Blam. |
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