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Report on the first stage of the iron age dating project in Israel : Supporting a low chronology

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors proposed a lower chronology of ancient Israel in the 11th-9th centuries BCE, about 75100 yr lower than the conventional one, which bears crucial implications not only for biblical history and historiography but also for cultural processes around the Mediterranean.
Abstract
The traditional chronology of ancient Israel in the 11th9th centuries BCE was constructed mainly by correlating archaeological phenomena with biblical narratives and with Bible-derived chronology. The chronology of Cyprus and Greece, and hence of points further west, are in turn based on that of the Levant. Thus, a newly proposed chronology, about 75100 yr lower than the conventional one, bears crucial implications not only for biblical history and historiography but also for cultural processes around the Mediterranean. A comprehensive radiocarbon program was initiated to try and resolve this dilemma. It involves several hundreds of measurements from 21 sites in Israel. Creating the extensive databases necessary for the resolution of tight chronological problems typical of historical periods involves issues of quality control, statistical treatment, modeling, and robustness analysis. The results of the first phase of the dating program favor the new, lower chronology.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Fluctuating radiocarbon offsets observed in the southern Levant and implications for archaeological chronology debates.

TL;DR: There is a substantive and fluctuating offset in measured radiocarbon ages between plant material growing in the southern Levant versus the standard Northern Hemisphere radiOCarbon calibration dataset derived from trees growing in central and northern Europe and North America.
Book

Judah in the Neo-Babylonian Period: The Archaeology of Desolation

Avraham Faust
TL;DR: Peleg, Y., and Feller as mentioned in this paper, 2004a, Betar 'Illit (West), Hadashot Arkheologiyot: ESI 116:52*-
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of Contexts for Radiocarbon Dating: Results from the Early Iron Age at Tell es-Safi/Gath, Israel

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the preliminary results of an ongoing project that aims to characterize Iron Age archaeological contexts from the eastern Mediterranean, and to identify those contexts that are suitable for dating, in order to improve the accuracy of 14C dates.

Archaeology and the Biblical Narrative: The Case of the United Monarchy

Amihai Mazar
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors and redactors must have utilized early source materials, such as temple and palace libraries and archives, monumental inscriptions perhaps centuries old, oral transmissions of ancient poetry and folk stories rooted in a remote historical past, and perhaps even some earlier historiographic writings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iron Age Mediterranean Chronology: A Rejoinder

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that a reliable way to provide absolute dates for the Iron Age in the central and western Mediterranean is by employing a combination of well-identified Greek pottery found in well-stratified sites and radiometric results from short-lived samples.
References
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Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences

TL;DR: In this paper, Monte Carlo techniques are used to fit dependent and independent variables least squares fit to a polynomial least-squares fit to an arbitrary function fitting composite peaks direct application of the maximum likelihood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of the radiocarbon calibration program

TL;DR: This paper highlights some of the main developments to the radiocarbon calibration program, OxCal, including changes to the sampling algorithms used which improve the convergence of the Bayesian analysis.
Book

The Bible unearthed : archaeology's new vision of ancient Israel and the origin of its sacred texts

TL;DR: In the days of King Josiah, archeology and the Bible as mentioned in this paper, the Bible as history, searching for the Patriarchs, did the Exodus happen? The Conquest of Canaan, who were the Israelites? Memories of a Golden Age?
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