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Featured researches published by Piotr Jacobsson.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Radiocarbon Releases from the 2011 Fukushima Nuclear Accident

Sheng Xu; Gordon Cook; A.J. Cresswell; Elaine Dunbar; Stewart P.H.T. Freeman; Xiaolin Hou; Piotr Jacobsson; Helen Kinch; Philip Naysmith; D.C.W. Sanderson; Brian Tripney

Radiocarbon activities were measured in annual tree rings for the years 2009 to 2015 from Japanese cedar trees (Cryptomeria japonica) collected at six sites ranging from 2.5–38 km northwest and north of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. The 14C specific activity varied from 280.4 Bq kg−1 C in 2010 to 226.0 Bq kg−1 C in 2015. The elevated 14C activities in the 2009 and 2010 rings confirmed 14C discharges during routine reactor operations, whereas those activities that were indistinguishable from background in 2012–2015 coincided with the permanent shutdown of the reactors after the accident in 2011. High-resolution 14C analysis of the 2011 ring indicated 14C releases during the Fukushima accident. The resulted 14C activity decreased with increasing distance from the plant. The maximum 14C activity released during the period of the accident was measured 42.4 Bq kg−1 C above the natural ambient 14C background. Our findings indicate that, unlike other Fukushima-derived radionuclides, the 14C released during the accident is indistinguishable from ambient background beyond the local environment (~30 km from the plant). Furthermore, the resulting dose to the local population from the excess 14C activities is negligible compared to the dose from natural/nuclear weapons sources.


Radiocarbon | 2017

Refining the Hallstatt Plateau: Short-Term 14C Variability and Small Scale Offsets in 50 Consecutive Single Tree-Rings from Southwest Scotland Dendro-Dated to 510–460 BC

Piotr Jacobsson; William Derek Hamilton; Gordon Cook; Anne Crone; Elaine Dunbar; Helen Kinch; Philip Naysmith; Brian Tripney; Sheng Xu

Radiocarbon ( 14 C) wiggle-match dating is a technique with a substantial potential to improve the precision of dating timbers in situations where dendrochronology is not tenable. However, one of the key reasons why obtaining a dendrochronological determination might be difficult is the short-lived nature of timbers on a range of archaeological sites, something that also affects the efficiency of the wiggle-match dating technique. Combined with the potential for high expense that the technique presents, it is paramount that wiggle-match dating research design has a good empirical basis. To this end we dated 50 consecutive, individual rings from a timber that grew during the Hallstatt radiocarbon calibration plateau (ca. 750–400 cal BC) in southwest Scotland. The results indicate that (1) the precision and accuracy of wiggle-match dates carried out on short-lived sequences during the Hallstatt plateau may suffer due to insufficient resolution of the calibration data, (2) sampling time-frames roughly equivalent to the underpinning calibration data are recommended (for the period in question this means decadal blocks), and (3) short-lived sequences are at risk of losing accuracy if the actual past trend of radiocarbon diverges from the mean of the radiocarbon calibration curve.


The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology | 2017

Radiocarbon Wiggle-Match Dating in the Intertidal Zone

Piotr Jacobsson; Alex Hale; Derek Hamilton; Gordon Cook

ABSTRACT Radiocarbon wiggle-match dating is a technique that can combine the versatility of radiocarbon dating with chronological information from tree-rings. This makes it useful in contexts where timbers are preserved, but dendrochronological dating is impossible. As intertidal and marine timbers are waterlogged, this can favor their preservation and hence allow wiggle-match 14C dating, which can be of significant help in deriving relatively precise chronologies for a range of coastal structures. As the technique depends on making multiple radiocarbon measurements towards a single date, efficiency in application is the key and hence a number of practical considerations need to be taken into account in advance of conducting a dating program. This paper discusses some of these practical concerns and reviews them in the context of the intertidal crannogs in the Firth of Clyde on the west coast of Scotland.


Radiocarbon | 2017

Radiocarbon evidence for the pace of the M-/L-PPNB transition in the 8th millennium BC south-west Asia

Piotr Jacobsson

The transition from the Middle to Late Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) happened throughout southwest Asia in the mid-8th millennium cal BC. It entailed the abandonment of a number of sites, rapid growth of others, as well as the wide spread of morphologically domestic caprines. What remains an unknown is how rapid these processes were in real time. Over the period when the transition was taking place, the calibration curve has two shallow sections divided by a sudden drop, which for many of the older dates creates an illusion of a sudden cultural break around 7600–7500 cal BC. Yet a more detailed study presented in this paper suggests that the transition event could have been spread over a more extended period of time. This, however, is still far from certain due to risks of old wood effects and complexities of site formation.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2015

Radiocarbon concentration in modern tree rings from Fukushima, Japan

Sheng Xu; Gordon Cook; A.J. Cresswell; Elaine Dunbar; Stewart P.H.T. Freeman; Helen Hastie; Xiaolin Hou; Piotr Jacobsson; Philip Naysmith; D.C.W. Sanderson


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2016

14C levels in the vicinity of the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant prior to the 2011 accident

Sheng Xu; Gordon Cook; A.J. Cresswell; Elaine Dunbar; Stewart P.H.T. Freeman; Helen Hastie; Xiaolin Hou; Piotr Jacobsson; Philip Naysmith; D.C.W. Sanderson; Brian Tripney; Katsuhiko Yamaguchi


Archive | 2009

Strata of Practice: habitus and issues in the early Cypriot Neolithic

Piotr Jacobsson


Archive | 2018

14C wiggle-match dating and the structural sequence at Cults Loch 3

Piotr Jacobsson; Derek Hamilton; Gordon Cook


European Journal of Archaeology | 2017

Exploring Site Formation and Building Local Contexts through Wiggle-Match Radiocarbon Dating: Re-Dating of the Firth of Clyde Crannogs, Scotland

Piotr Jacobsson; Alex Hale; Gordon Cook; Derek Hamilton


Archive | 2016

Proceedings of the 17th Iron Age Research Student Symposium, Edinburgh: 29th May-1st June 2014

Graeme J.R. Erskine; Piotr Jacobsson; Paul Miller; Scott Stetkiewicz

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Brian Tripney

University of Strathclyde

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Xiaolin Hou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Alex Hale

Historic Environment Scotland

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