Climate change and human occupation in the Southern Arabian lowlands during the last deglaciation and the Holocene

Paleohydrological and archaeological evidence from the Southern and South-Eastern Arabian Peninsula reveal strong relations between phases of human settlements and climate change linked to the Indian monsoon system. During the early to mid-Holocene, large fresh-water lakes extended in the lowland de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global and planetary change 2010-07, Vol.72 (4), p.412-428
Hauptverfasser: Lézine, Anne-Marie, Robert, Christian, Cleuziou, Serge, Inizan, Marie-Louise, Braemer, Frank, Saliège, Jean-François, Sylvestre, Florence, Tiercelin, Jean-Jacques, Crassard, Rémy, Méry, Sophie, Charpentier, Vincent, Steimer-Herbet, Tara
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container_end_page 428
container_issue 4
container_start_page 412
container_title Global and planetary change
container_volume 72
creator Lézine, Anne-Marie
Robert, Christian
Cleuziou, Serge
Inizan, Marie-Louise
Braemer, Frank
Saliège, Jean-François
Sylvestre, Florence
Tiercelin, Jean-Jacques
Crassard, Rémy
Méry, Sophie
Charpentier, Vincent
Steimer-Herbet, Tara
description Paleohydrological and archaeological evidence from the Southern and South-Eastern Arabian Peninsula reveal strong relations between phases of human settlements and climate change linked to the Indian monsoon system. During the early to mid-Holocene, large fresh-water lakes extended in the lowland deserts of Ramlat as-Sab'atayn (Yemen) and Wahiba Sands (Oman), which were very similar to those occurring in the North, in the Rub' al-Khali (Saudi Arabia), at that time. Many archaeological sites, characterized by scattered stone artefacts, ostrich-eggshells and bones around hearths, are related to this lacustrine phase, which culminated around 10 000–8000 cal yr B.P. in the lowland deserts before the lakes progressively dried up. The last record of fresh-water bodies' extensions date back 7300 cal yr B.P. at Shabwa (Yemen) and 7500 cal yr B.P. at al-Haid (Oman). Then, fresh-water was probably available only from seasonal run-off from adjacent highlands, where paleolakes persisted into the late Holocene. Dry climate conditions in the inland desert of Yemen during the late Holocene coincide with a phase of intensive human inhabitation as testified by development of irrigation in the piedmontane areas, numerous necropolises of built collective burials and houses.
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subjects Arabian lowlands
Archaeology and Prehistory
Bones
clay mineralogy
Climate change
Deserts
Holocene
Houses
Human
human settlements
Humanities and Social Sciences
Lakes
Lowlands
Oman
paleohydrology
palynology
Phases
Yemen
title Climate change and human occupation in the Southern Arabian lowlands during the last deglaciation and the Holocene
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