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answer 2 The age of fossils would ordinarily be determined by looking up the type of fossil in a record system known as Paleontology. Due to various changes in the Earth's climate and environment, most fossils have only a limited age range.

The reasons for the limited age range for various fossils is incompletely known, but the general pattern is well known.

A second approach is based on the idea that the sediment layers near the top of a earth column are younger than those at the bottom. This was the only approach available to early fossil hunters. It has the fancy name of "the principle of superposition" - i.e. things at the top are younger!

A third approach is to consider dating using radioactive techniques. Carbon dating is used for this, but for technical reasons samples older than 60 000 years may not produce reliable results.

So radiocarbon (as it is known) is very useful for Archaeology, but not much older.

Some of the information below (from another contributor) is wrong, as C12 and C13 are naturally occurring items, and are NOT radioactive.

The age of a fossil can be told by a technique called carbon dating. wherein the scientists measure the ratio of the heavy isotope of carbon ( 6C13) to carbon ( 6C12 ) present in the fossil.

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15y ago

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