Monday, May 25, 2020
OSL Dating of the Oley Hills Site - Norman Muller
In the current issue of North
American Archaeologist (Vol 41(1), 33-50, 2020), is the article “Optically
stimulated luminescence dating of a probable Native American cairn and wall
site in Eastern Pennsylvania.” The
article was coauthored by James Feathers, director of the Luminescence Dating
Laboratory at the University of Washington, and by Norman Muller, retired art
conservator at the Princeton University Art Museum. The site in question is the Oley Hills site
in eastern Pennsylvania, which Muller has been studying since 1997. In 2018, two small cobbles of gneiss were
removed in complete darkness from the Terrace, the largest built feature at the
site, and sent to Feathers for analysis.
In 2020 he determined that the two cobbles were placed around 2570 ±
330 B.P., which is within the Adena period.
This is the first time that direct dating of stone by OSL has been
applied to any of the numerous cairn and wall sites in the northeastern U.S.
Wow!!!
ReplyDeleteHey I found a neolithic burial site in the same county and I have been contacting proper authorities but they're all not doing shit about it. I found stone tools and preserved NEOLITHIC HUMAN REMAINS which I took and am currently taking care of. Where do I take em? Again, nobody I've talked to even cares. That's just local authorities/colleges/museums. Who can I talk to??
ReplyDeleteHey former commentor can you see this? We found a similar site in Monroe county, but live closer to Oley Hills. We have also found a lot of artifacts from the hills around Reading. Please comment if you've seen this I would love to get in contact :)
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