Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
cal years
English answer:
Calibrated years before present (cal years B.P.)
Added to glossary by
lorenab23
Feb 18, 2010 18:53
14 yrs ago
9 viewers *
English term
cal year
English
Science
Geography
Rivers and floodplains
Is this an abbreviation for "calendar", and if so, what is the difference between a calendar year and other kinds?
"Ice-free conditions in Novaya Zemlya 35 000-30 000 cal years B.P., as indicated by radiocarbon ages and amino acid racemization evidence from marine ..."
"Ice-free conditions in Novaya Zemlya 35 000-30 000 cal years B.P., as indicated by radiocarbon ages and amino acid racemization evidence from marine ..."
Responses
4 +6 | Calibrated year before present (cal year B.P.) | lorenab23 |
4 +3 | calibrated or calendar years | Jennifer Levey |
References
relevant to "radio carbon age" | Stephanie Ezrol |
Change log
Feb 25, 2010 16:02: lorenab23 Created KOG entry
Responses
+6
20 mins
Selected
Calibrated year before present (cal year B.P.)
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "What an oddball way to abbreviate something... Thanks all :)"
+3
9 mins
calibrated or calendar years
FAQ: What does cal BP mean? - [ Traducir esta página ]
9 Jul 2008 ... "cal BP" stands for "calibrated years before the present" and what that means essentially is that archaeologists have discovered wiggles in ...
archaeology.about.com/.../faq-what-does-cal-bp-mean.htm - En caché - SimilaresC14Info - Calibration - [ Traducir esta página ]
These values should correspond exactly to normal historical years BC and AD. The term cal BP means the number of years before 1950 and can be directly ...
c14.arch.ox.ac.uk/calibration.html - En caché - SimilaresBefore Present - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - [ Traducir esta página ]
The ages are expressed in years before present (BP) where "present" is defined ... as cal BP, where "cal" indicates "calendar years" or "calibrated years". ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Before_Present - En caché - Similares
9 Jul 2008 ... "cal BP" stands for "calibrated years before the present" and what that means essentially is that archaeologists have discovered wiggles in ...
archaeology.about.com/.../faq-what-does-cal-bp-mean.htm - En caché - SimilaresC14Info - Calibration - [ Traducir esta página ]
These values should correspond exactly to normal historical years BC and AD. The term cal BP means the number of years before 1950 and can be directly ...
c14.arch.ox.ac.uk/calibration.html - En caché - SimilaresBefore Present - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - [ Traducir esta página ]
The ages are expressed in years before present (BP) where "present" is defined ... as cal BP, where "cal" indicates "calendar years" or "calibrated years". ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Before_Present - En caché - Similares
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Sabine Akabayov, PhD
3 mins
|
agree |
eesegura
3 mins
|
agree |
ContextGlobal
: It is probably calender years, but it depends on the context
1 day 20 hrs
|
neutral |
Jim Tucker (X)
: Yes, but it's only "calibrated"; one sees "cal years BP" and "uncal years BP"
2 days 19 hrs
|
Reference comments
28 mins
Reference:
relevant to "radio carbon age"
The following is from Wikipedia which I think is relevant to your text. Wikipedia does make mistakes, and the phrase at the end contradicts their explanation, but I think it is still useful.
And their footnotes can take you to more original sources if you want to look at them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Before_Present
Radiocarbon calibration
Further information: Radiocarbon dating#Calibration
"Dates determined using radiocarbon dating come in two kinds: uncalibrated (also called Libby or raw) and calibrated (also called Cambridge) dates.[12]
Uncalibrated radiocarbon dates may be expressed using BP years; however, they are not identical to calendar dates. This has to do with the fact that the level of atmospheric radiocarbon (carbon-14 or 14C) has not been strictly constant during the span of time that can be radiocarbon-dated.
Uncalibrated radiocarbon ages can be converted to calendar dates by means of calibration curves based on comparison of raw radiocarbon dates of samples independently dated by other methods, such as dendrochronology (dating on basis of tree growth-rings) and stratigraphy (dating on the basis of sediment layers in mud or sedimentary rock).
Such calibrated dates are expressed as cal BP."
The following from Wikipedia contradicts what they say above:
", where "cal" indicates "calendar years" or "calibrated years"."
And their footnotes can take you to more original sources if you want to look at them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Before_Present
Radiocarbon calibration
Further information: Radiocarbon dating#Calibration
"Dates determined using radiocarbon dating come in two kinds: uncalibrated (also called Libby or raw) and calibrated (also called Cambridge) dates.[12]
Uncalibrated radiocarbon dates may be expressed using BP years; however, they are not identical to calendar dates. This has to do with the fact that the level of atmospheric radiocarbon (carbon-14 or 14C) has not been strictly constant during the span of time that can be radiocarbon-dated.
Uncalibrated radiocarbon ages can be converted to calendar dates by means of calibration curves based on comparison of raw radiocarbon dates of samples independently dated by other methods, such as dendrochronology (dating on basis of tree growth-rings) and stratigraphy (dating on the basis of sediment layers in mud or sedimentary rock).
Such calibrated dates are expressed as cal BP."
The following from Wikipedia contradicts what they say above:
", where "cal" indicates "calendar years" or "calibrated years"."
Peer comments on this reference comment:
neutral |
Maria Fokin
: how is it contradictory? uncalibrated ages are calibrated in order to make them equivalent in length to calendar years. threfore, calibrated = calendar. what the abreviation stands for is another matter. (IMXO cal=calibrated)
1 hr
|
Perhaps they are being more subtle than my first reading. I read cal indicates to mean that cal can be an abbreviation for either.
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