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The volcanic eruption of Santorini was the greatest in historical times. Assigned to the Late Minoan IA period, archaeological correlations implied a date late in the 16th century BC. Yet indirect natural science evidence suggested a date in the 17th century. The dating ceased to be indirect when branches of olive trees were found buried in the debris of the eruption. The radiocarbon Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) dating technique and the intcal04 calibration curve suggested a two-sigma range date between 1600 and 1627 BC.The debate continues; the papers here cover the radiocarbon results
Archaeological dating --- Minoans --- History --- Chronology --- Mediterranean Region --- Santorini Volcano (Greece) --- Thera Island (Greece) --- Antiquities --- Eruptions --- Civilization, Minoan --- Archaeology --- Dating in archaeology --- Dating --- Kallísti (Notio Aigaio, Greece) --- Nēsi Thēra (Greece) --- Nísi Thíra (Greece) --- Nisos Thēra (Greece) --- Nísos Thíra (Greece) --- Phira Island (Greece) --- Sandoríni (Greece) --- Santorin Island (Greece) --- Santorinē Island (Greece) --- Thira Island (Greece) --- Santorin Volcano (Greece) --- Civilization, Aegean --- Cretans --- Methodology --- Cyclades (Greece) --- Arkeologi --- Jordbävningar --- Utgrävningar --- metodik. --- Santorini Island (Greece) --- Minoans - History - Chronology - Congresses --- Archaeological dating - Mediterranean Region - Congresses --- Santorini Volcano (Greece) - Antiquities - Congresses --- Santorini Island (Greece) - Eruptions - Congresses --- Mediterranean Region - Antiquities - Congresses
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