Pukienė et al., Non-destructive dendrochronology of a human-sized wooden sculpture of Saint Louis using X-ray computed tomography and micro-imaging. Boswijk et al., Improving chronology for Aotearoa New Zealand: New research in tree-ring derived radiocarbon and stable isotope time series. Szabó et al., Local timber dominated pre-industrial construction: Insights from archival and dendrochronological data. Yermokhin et al., First multispecies tree-ring chronologies from the 6th millennium BCE in Southeastern Europe. Neubauer et al., The underground forest: Tracing forest history in the Erzgebirge through the wood finds from the medieval silver mines of Dippoldiswalde. Davies et al., ISODATE – Software for stable isotope dendrochronology. Yermokhin & Zunde, An 831-year pine tree-ring chronology from Northern Belarus reveals historical timber trade routes to the Baltic and beyond. Gmińska-Nowak et al., Cistercian heritage in Pelplin, Poland. Dendrochronological dating of the covers of medieval codices. Läänelaid et al., Investigating the age of the door of the King’s Chapel in Tallinn Dome.
Last chance to submit your paper to our 'Dendrochronology and the Human Past' Special Issue, deadline 31 December 2025.
9 articles fully published, 5 under review.
Thank you so much, dear authors, for the huge interest, and for sharing your top-class research.
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