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The half-life of carbon-14 is 5600 years. If a piece of charcoal made from the wood of a tree shows only 66% of the carbon-14 expected in living matter, when did the tree die?

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  1. 31 July, 14:26
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    3400 years The first thing to do is calculate how many half-lives that the sample has undergone. So basically, we have the following equation that we need to solve for X. 2^ (-X) = 0.66 So what we're looking for is the logarithm to base 2 of 0.66, Since we can convert logarithms from in any base to a specified base by dividing by the logarithm of the desired base, we have log (0.66) / log (2) = - 0.180456064 / 0.301029996 = - 0.59946207 So - X = - 0.59946207, and X = 0.59946207, which tells us that a bit over one half of a half life has expired which makes sense since there's more than one half of the original carbon-14 left. Now to get the years, multiply the half-life by the number of half-lives expired, getting 5600 * 0.59946207 = 3356.987594 years Rounding to 2 significant figures gives us 3400 years.
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