I think most bods use a battery of tests to do dating stuff nowadays. C14 was the first real innovation after Petrie perfected stratification through pottery dating - sometimes more art than science but remarkably accurate nonetheless; it became a standard in archaeology and stil remains pretty useful. Dendrochronology, in conjunction with C14 dating when available, can be almost spot on when dealing with wood from the first to nineteenth centuris. Recently, radioflourine dating and thermoluminescence, along with DNA sequencing when dealing with groups of remains, can narrow the dates down. Even so, the further back one goes, the less precise dating can be, till even our best methods are plus or minus a century at 3000 BC.