En 1988 ya se publicó un estudio científico,
basado en un análisis del hielo de Groenlandia, que proponía
Ahora, con dos estudios más apoyando la
fecha de 1650 –
Como curiosidad, aquí tenéis la referencia
de ese artículo ‘pionero’ de 1988:
Dating of the Santorini eruption C.U. Hammer et al. Revista Nature. Nº 6163, pag. 401. 1988.
Saludos,
Luis
De:
terraeantiqvae@yahoogroups.com [mailto:terraeantiqvae@yahoogroups.com] En nombre de Jose Luis Santos Fernández
Enviado el: lunes, 01 de mayo de
2006 10:13
Para:
terraeantiqvae@yahoogroups.com
Asunto: [terraeantiqvae] Cornell
study of ancient volcano, seeds and tree rings, suggests rewriting Late Bronze
Age Mediterranean history
Separated in history by 100 years,
the seafaring Minoans of Crete and the mercantile Canaanites of northern
By Alex Kwan
Trenchmaster
Vronwy Hankey and foreman Antonis Zidianakis excavate storage jars from the
Minoan settlement Myrtos-Pyrgos. The jars were analyzed in the Cornell study
using radiocarbon analyses. Provided
Cultural links between the Aegean and Near Eastern
civilizations will have to be reconsidered: A new
The study team was led by Sturt Manning, a
professor of classics and the incoming director of the Malcolm and Carolyn
Wiener Laboratory for
The findings, which place the Santorini eruption in
the late 17th century B.C., not 100 years later as long believed, may lead to a
critical rewriting of Late Bronze Age history of Mediterranean civilizations
that flourished about 3,600 years ago, Manning said.
The Santorini volcano, one of the largest eruptions
in history, buried towns but left archaeological evidence in the surrounding
A
pumice quarry on Santorini shows the Minoan eruption pumice series. Provided
"Santorini is the
In pursuit of this time stamp, Manning and
colleagues analyzed 127 radiocarbon measurements from short-lived samples,
including tree-ring fractions and harvested seeds that were collected in
Santorini,
"At the moment, the radiocarbon method is the
only direct way of dating the eruption and the associated archaeology,"
said Manning, who puts Santorini's eruption in or just after the range 1660 to
1613 B.C. This date contradicts conventional estimates that linked Aegean
styles in trade goods found in
To resolve the discrepancy, Manning suggests
realigning the
Aegean and Near Eastern cultures, including the
Minoan, Mycenaean and Anatolian civilizations, are fundamental building blocks
for Greek and European early history. The new findings stretch Aegean
chronology by 100 years, a move that could mean alliances and intercultural
influences that were previously thought improbable.
The new results were bolstered by a
dendrochronology and radiocarbon study, led by Danish geologist Walter
Friedrich and published in the same issue of Science, which dated an olive
branch severed during the Santorini eruption and arrived independently at a
late 17th century B.C. dating.
This work, Manning added, continues Cornell's
leading role in developing a secure chronology for the
Fuente: Graduate student Alex Kwan
is a writer intern with the Cornell News Service.
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