I have often wondered how archaeologists and historians
can state that something is from 5,000 years B.C., ( Before Christ).
I do know that there is carbon dating and nuclear content
dating which allows them to work backwards a certain number
of years then deduct 2015 from the results, but without artifacts,
or anything that can be tested, how do they do it?
What prompts me to ask this question is an article that I read
in a newspaper about the eclipse, it stated:- "The earliest record
of a total eclipse is on a Babylonian clay tablet dated May 3, 1375
BC".
How do they know, how can they tell, did they even have a month of
May way back then, nobody can explain this to me and I have asked
many people over the years.
We work from the birth of Christ and call it AD, Anno Domini, but
what was used before, this really puzzles me.
Any ideas/suggestions?
Mike.
can state that something is from 5,000 years B.C., ( Before Christ).
I do know that there is carbon dating and nuclear content
dating which allows them to work backwards a certain number
of years then deduct 2015 from the results, but without artifacts,
or anything that can be tested, how do they do it?
What prompts me to ask this question is an article that I read
in a newspaper about the eclipse, it stated:- "The earliest record
of a total eclipse is on a Babylonian clay tablet dated May 3, 1375
BC".
How do they know, how can they tell, did they even have a month of
May way back then, nobody can explain this to me and I have asked
many people over the years.
We work from the birth of Christ and call it AD, Anno Domini, but
what was used before, this really puzzles me.
Any ideas/suggestions?
Mike.