Wiggle matching may be used as a complement to ordinary
radiocarbon dating in some situations where the latter yields several alternatives. In its simplest form, radiocarbon dating works by taking the
logarithm of the proportion of the
isotope 14C of the total amount of carbon of both isotopes 12C and 14C in an organic sample. Since 12C is stable, but 14C decays radioactively, the proportion of 14C in a given sample gets smaller with time. There is indeed a
linear relationship between that time and the logarithm of the 14C proportion. Thus, if one knows the 14C proportion that an organic sample contained when it was formed (say, by absorption of atmospheric carbon in
photosynthesis), and its lower proportion today, then the precise time since that photosynthesis may be calculated directly (up to measurement errors). However, the 14C proportion in the atmospheric carbon has
not been constant. It has varied for several reasons. For instance, 14C is created continuously in the upper atmosphere under the impact of
solar energetic particles; and the amount of such particles hitting the Earth varies with the
solar cycle. Thus, two samples with the same present 14C proportions may have different ages, since the older one was formed when the 14C proportion happened to be higher. In fact, the relationship between the present 14C proportion logarithm and the chronological time since the carbon in that sample was bound by photosynthesis does not form a straight line, but a 'wiggling' one. This wiggling often may be observed in some kinds of archaeological finds; in particular, in pieces of wood where a sufficient number of
growth rings are discernible. By means of these rings, it may be possible to take a series of samples from one piece of wood, where we know that they were formed with a time distance of (for instance) five years between each sample. In this way, the relative variation of the logarithmic 14C proportion in the years when this piece of wood grew may be determined, sufficiently well to decide which one of a number of possible ages this wood piece has. == Applications ==