Description |
An ICTP-IAEA in person workshop
Accelerator Mass Spectrometry radiocarbon dating is especially useful to determine the age of objects and their chronology over the past 55,000 years. This technique is routinely used for dating of both cultural and natural heritage materials and is successfully applied for forensic cases.
The workshop will provide an advanced training and information exchange platform. The workshop seeks to review the state-of-the-art in the area of analysis with the emphasis on the newest development and trends. Novel applications, guidelines, protocols to improve radiocarbon dating will be presented. Several case studies in the field of heritage and forensics sciences will be discussed.
The recently published IAEA e-learning on radiocarbon dating technique is available:
Call for Contributed Abstracts: It is compulsory to submit an abstract for poster presentation as part of your application. Your abstract should describe your current work on radiocarbon dating or application can benefit from radiocarbon dating. A poster session will be organised to present and discuss the participants’ research results. The workshop is open both for young and experienced scientists, archaeologists, curators, forensic experts/law-enforcement actors, and policy makers interested in this quickly evolving subject. Topics:
Lecturers:
L. CALCAGNILE, CEDAD, University of Salento, Italy E. DELQUE-KOLIC, LMC14, University Paris-Saclay, France M. FEDI, INFN, Italy I. HAJDAS, ETH Zürich, Switzerland M. HUELS, University of Kiel, Germany F. MARZAIOLI, Università degli Studi della Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli”, Italy M. MOLNAR, ATOMKI-HAS, Hungary G. QUARTA, CEDAD, University of Salento, Italy A. QUILES, IFAO, Egypt F. ZANINI, Elettra – Sincrotrone, Italy
Grants: A limited number of grants are available to support the attendance of selected participants, with priority given to participants from developing countries. There is no registration fee.
Female scientists are encouraged to apply. Collaboration with the IAEA-ANSTO Collaborating Centre on “ New and Advanced Techniques and Applications of Nuclear Science and Technology Towards a Sustainable Environment” and IAEA-University of Paris-Saclay Collaborating Centre on “Atoms for Heritage” is acknowledged. |