IDENTIFICATION AND AMS RADIOCARBON DATING OF WOOD FROM A BEAM IN SAINT MARGARET’S CHURCH, KOPČANY, SLOVAKIA

Author(s): Peter Kováčik; Linda Scott Cummings

Year: 2014

Summary

St. Margaret’s Church, the oldest standing stone church in Slovakia, was constructed on the edge of a military settlement during the second half of the 9th Century on a high place, in the flood plain of the Morava River in Kopčany, Slovakia. Residents of the military settlement in Kopčany (Slovakia) patrolled the road to the fortified settlement Mikulčice - Valy, now in the Czech republic (Peter Baxa, personal communication November 5, 2014). Archaeological investigations at the church include radiocarbon dating of various materials. A sample of wood collected from the sixth to eighth rings of a tree trunk that was used as a wooden beam walled into the masonry crown of the church nave was submitted for identification and AMS radiocarbon dating.

Cite this Record

IDENTIFICATION AND AMS RADIOCARBON DATING OF WOOD FROM A BEAM IN SAINT MARGARET’S CHURCH, KOPČANY, SLOVAKIA. Peter Kováčik, Linda Scott Cummings. PRI Technical Report ,2014-122. 2014 ( tDAR id: 394337) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8HM59F9

Keywords

Investigation Types
Data Recovery / Excavation

General
14-122

Geographic Keywords
Kopčany Slovakia

Spatial Coverage

min long: 17.066; min lat: 48.752 ; max long: 17.152; max lat: 48.798 ;

Individual & Institutional Roles

Contact(s): PaleoResearch Institute

File Information

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2014-122_Report.pdf 53.75kb Dec 30, 2014 9:38:46 AM Public