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          STUDIES   DendrochronologyDefne Bozkurt, a Cornell student who we were fortunate to be able to 
          borrow for a day from Dr. Omura and the Kamankale Höyük Excavations, 
          supervised packing of the samples from Kerkenes for shipment to The 
          Malcolm and Carolyn Wiener Laboratory for Aegean and Near Eastern Dendrochronology 
          at Cornell University where Peter Kuniholm and his team are counting 
          the annual growth rings. The wood is pine and, at the time of writing, 
          the longest sequence is 197 rings which should extend the Cornell Bronze 
          Age/Iron Age chronology downward by at least a century.
 
 http://www.arts.cornell.edu/dendro/ Geology, Geomorphology and Hydrology
 Catherine Kuzucuoglu, Mehmet Ekmekçi and Harun Aydin were able to identify 
          the different types of rock, sandstones and chalk, which had been used 
          in addition to the granite at Kerkenes (Fig. 61). 
          Mehmet has written the draft of a detailed report on the hydrology of 
          the Kerkenes Dag which explains how the water table is replenished and 
          also describes the way in which the Iron Age reservoirs were filled 
          by seepage. 2002 was the final season of a program of geomorphlogical 
          coring in the surrounding region that aims at providing evidence for 
          human impact on the landscape and, in particular, at documenting the 
          effects of both building the Iron Age city and its violent destruction. 
          The results of their laboratory analysis are eagerly awaited.
 
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