Litcius/Paper detail

Oxygen isotope dating of oak and elm timbers from the portcullis windlass, Byward Tower, Tower of London

Neil J. Loader, D. H. Miles, Danny McCarroll, Giles Young, D. E. Davies, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, J. G. James

2020Journal of Archaeological Science15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A new isotopic method for dating oak and non-oak (elm) timbers is applied to samples from the portcullis windlass mechanism in the Byward Tower, Tower of London. This structure was previously sampled for ring width dendrochronology but failed to date. Successful application of the stable oxygen isotope dating method returns a felling date of winter AD 1656/7 for the oak timbers used to construct the gear wheel and a date of after AD 1648 (terminus post quem) for an associated elm shaft. This is the first reported application of oxygen isotope dendrochronology to date elm and confirms the significant potential of the method for dating species other than oak.

Topics & Concepts

DendrochronologyFellingTowerIsotopes of oxygenGeologyArchaeologyPaleontologyForestryGeographyGeochemistryTree-ring climate responsesWood Treatment and PropertiesArchaeology and ancient environmental studies