Timeline of dendrochronology timestamp events
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A timeline of dendrochronology timestamped events.
Timelines
[edit ]Timeline from all sub-regions
[edit ] 3807 BCE, 3806 BCE
- The Sweet Track, ancient timber roadway of England (oldest engineered road yet discovered)
3374 BCE
- Tree-ring dating of find site layer at Arslantepe-Malatya; the cylinder seal unearthed contains an image of a threshing-board or sledge
2049 BCE
- Seahenge constructed in Britain
2300 to 1950 BCE, 1950 to 1700 BCE
- A1, and A2 date periods for the Unetice culture, early Bronze Age culture, Europe
c. 1300 BCE
- firewood dating; see Oxhide ingot from the Uluburun shipwreck, south coast of Turkey
148 BCE, 147 BCE
- Corlea Trackway, Republic of Ireland; used for industrial harvesting of peat for energy generation
95 BCE
- Navan Fort Northern Ireland; felling of the oak tree used as central post of a large structure built with over two hundred posts.[1]
0
- Timestamp of BCE, or BP to positive years, CE
290
begins 535, multiple years
619
- Tide mill of Nendrum Monastery (oldest known tide mill)
737 to 968
- 3 phases of construction between 737 and 968, Danevirke peninsular fortification (east–west)
753
- Staraya Ladoga, the prosperous trading village in Finland at the start of the Age of the Vikings
890
- The Gokstad ship found in a burial mound, a ship burial
932 to 966
- fishing at Bridgwater Bay, Bristol Channel, England; 'mudhorse fishing', with structures built in the bay at Stert Flats
963
- (from ~800 onward)-pavement dates of 963, in the medieval fortified settlement Sarskoye Gorodishche on the Volga trade route
980, 981
- Viking ring fortress; Trelleborg[2]
~1042 and 11th century
- See Skuldelev ships; Skuldelev 2 dated to 1042, found at Skuldelev, 20 km north of Roskilde, Denmark, built of oak from near Dublin
1088 to 1100
- Salmon Ruins in New Mexico, USA; 150-room structure
1175
- church of Ludwigsdorf, Lüdwigsdorf (Görlitz, Germany)
1190
- first dating of wood from the megastructure cliff-dwelling, Cliff Palace; 1190 to various dates; major construction, first 20 years
1280s–1350
- The Sierra Ancha (Broad Mountains) cliff dwellings, Arizona
ending at 1291
- multiple constructions prior to 1291, the Stokesay Castle
1341 to 1352
- Aston Eyre Hall; (an additional barn dated to 1613)
1346
starting at: 1347
- Black Death migration; first shipwrecks etc.-(total crew death), with start of disease; a major hiatus begins of construction in cities–(a gap in the tree-ring dated wood pieces)
1391, 1392
- Gatehouse at Church of Mavesyn Ridware
1434
- Trondenes church, Norway, a stone, stave church
1450 to 1540
1465, 1466
1535
- See: The Sun Dog Painting-(reproduction) of 1636
~1600, =400 BP
- Kostal Cone, British Columbia, Canada: (newest cinder cone)
1636
- (dated 1636 wooden frame of copy): a copy of the original: The Sun Dog Painting by Urban målare (Malare the Painter); the sun dogs in the paintings are from the oldest views of the city of Stockholm, Sweden; the Sun Dog atmospheric events of 20 April 1535
1645 to 1715
1699
- dating of the red cedar forests that were lowered into tidal zones by the 1700 Cascadia earthquake, finalizing their winter growth rings
1722 to 1749
- Old Fort Ruin, in New Mexico, USA
1733 to 1751
- Adolfo Canyon Site (LA 5665), pueblito and hogan site, New Mexico, USA
19 May 1780
- See New England's Dark Day, (from an Ontario, Canada forest fire)
1790 to 1820
1828
- The Walker Cabin, of Marble Springs historic site in Tennessee
Cliff dwellings, etc, the Americas
[edit ] 1088 to 1100
- Salmon Ruins in New Mexico, USA; 150-room structure
1190
- first dating of wood from the megastructure cliff dwelling, Cliff Palace; 1190 to various dates; major construction, first 20 years
1280s–1350
- The Sierra Ancha-(Broad Mountains) cliff dwellings, Arizona
1722 to 1749
- Old Fort Ruin, in New Mexico, USA
1733 to 1751
- Adolfo Canyon Site (LA 5665), pueblito and hogan site, New Mexico, USA
- for the Americas, see also: Timeline of Chacoan history
References
[edit ]- ^ The second circular fort "Trelleborg" found in Sweden Archived 16 June 2004 at the Wayback Machine