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Journal ArticleDOI

Vegetation development and human occupation in the Damascus region of southwestern Syria from the Late Pleistocene to Holocene

TL;DR: Rockshelter Baaz in the Damascus region of Syria provided a variety of botanical remains from the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene period as mentioned in this paper, which provided new information about the vegetation evolution in this region.
Abstract: Rockshelter Baaz in the Damascus region of Syria provided a variety of botanical remains from the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene period. These remains provide new information about the vegetation evolution in this region. The earliest occupational levels correspond with a moisture peak during the Late Pleistocene, between ca. 34–32 kyr b.p., when pine expanded. The next occupations took place during extreme arid conditions, ca. 23–21 kyr b.p., and probably during the Last Glacial Maximum when a steppe vegetation was established. The occupation level of the Younger Dryas, represented by Natufian remains, suggests that the area had been covered by almond-pistachio steppe, similar to later periods of the Early Holocene, and was probably located just outside the range of dense wild cereal stands. There is no drastic impact of the Younger Dryas visible on the vegetation in the botanical remains. The lack of fruits and seeds at Baaz indicates that the site was more likely to have been a temporary hunting post rather than a plant processing site for much of its history. It is ideally suited to this purpose because of its location over the Jaba′deen Pass and the associated springs. However, archaeological remains from the Natufian period, suggest that the site was more permanently occupied during this time.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper used radiocarbon dates from archaeological sites and palaeoenvironmental datasets to test the predominate models for culture change from the early Epipalaeolithic to the Pottery Neolithic (c. 23,000-8000 cal. bp) to explore how well they actually fit with well documented and dated palaeoclimatic events, such as the Bolling-Allerod, Younger Dryas, Preboreal and 8.2 ka event.
Abstract: Few prehistoric developments have received as much attention as the origins of agriculture and its associated societal implications in the Near East. A great deal of this research has focused on correlating the timing of various cultural transformations leading up to farming and village life with dramatic climatic events. Using rigorously selected radiocarbon dates from archaeological sites and palaeoenvironmental datasets, we test the predominate models for culture change from the early Epipalaeolithic to the Pottery Neolithic (c. 23,000–8000 cal. bp) to explore how well they actually fit with well-documented and dated palaeoclimatic events, such as the Bolling-Allerod, Younger Dryas, Preboreal and 8.2 ka event. Our results demonstrate that these correlations are not always as clear or as consistent as some authors suggest. Rather, any relationships between climate change and culture change are more complicated than existing models allow. The lack of fit between these sources of data highlight our need for further and more precise chronological data from archaeological sites, additional localized palaeoclimatic data sets, and more nuanced models for integrating palaeoenvironmental data and prehistoric people's behaviours.

139 citations


Cites background from "Vegetation development and human oc..."

  • ...Where present, pollen from archaeological sites seems to agree generally with other pollen evidence (Leroi-Gourhan & Darmon 1991) regarding a shift from chenopods and other dry, cool species to more forested conditions at the end of the LGM, with a brief return of these arid-adapted plants at the Younger Dryas (Deckers et al. 2009; Rosen 2004; 2007)....

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  • ...…to agree generally with other pollen evidence (Leroi-Gourhan & Darmon 1991) regarding a shift from chenopods and other dry, cool species to more forested conditions at the end of the LGM, with a brief return of these arid-adapted plants at the Younger Dryas (Deckers et al. 2009; Rosen 2004; 2007)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on 1-grained domesticated Einkorn wheat, incorporating data from geology, vegetation history, and climate in the Karacadag region of southeastern Turkey.
Abstract: The domestication of the Neolithic founder crops of the Near East has recently been a topic of debate particularly with respect to how rapidly the domestication of these crops occurred. One school of thought maintains that these processes lasted several thousand years (‘protracted model’ with ‘gathering’, ‘cultivation’ and ‘domestication’ as three stages of a continuum, each taking up to several thousand years), while another favors the view that domestication occurred much more quickly, over several hundred years at most (‘rapid transition’). Our study focuses on one of these crops, 1-grained domesticated Einkorn wheat, incorporating data from geology, vegetation history, and climate. In the Karacadag region of southeastern Turkey, where 1-grained Einkorn wheat was domesticated, the climate was severe (i.e. cold and dry) during the Younger Dryas. The climate of the Younger Dryas acted as boundary during which a) conditions were not suitable for ‘cultivation’, and b) Einkorn would have retreated to refugia exhibiting more suitable moisture-bearing soils that would have made ‘gathering’ difficult. Around 11600 cal. b.p., the Younger Dryas ended and a very rapid climatic amelioration commenced at the beginning of the Early Holocene, enabling grasses to spread throughout the region. A ritual PPNA/PPNB site (Gobekli Tepe) and associated PPNB settlements such as Nevali Cori and Cayonu were established at this time. In the settlements of Nevali Cori and Cafer Hoyuk, the oldest domesticated Einkorn was found in the earliest archaeological layers. This confirms that the inhabitants made use of domesticated 1-grained Einkorn from the very beginning of settlement activity, although they continued to practice a mixed lifestyle as hunter-gatherers and farmers. For Cayonu the issue is more complex, but here domesticated Einkorn also appears around the same time. In summary, by 10400 cal. b.p. domesticated 1-grained Einkorn was present in large quantities at a variety of sites. This would give a maximum window of time lasting approximately 1,200 years and is therefore not in agreement with the ‘protracted’ model but would be consistent with a ‘rapid transition’. It is improbable that the ‘cultivation’ of wild Einkorn was practiced in the Karacadag region, since wild Einkorn was plentiful during the favorable growing conditions following the Younger Dryas, making it more likely that ‘gathering’ would have been practiced. Because Einkorn has not been found in early settlements in the southern Levant, this crop cannot have been ‘gathered’ and ‘cultivated’ there but instead was ‘domesticated’ independently and solely in southeastern Turkey. Therefore, the YD acts as a boundary, providing a maximum time frame for 1-grained Einkorn domestication.

35 citations


Cites background from "Vegetation development and human oc..."

  • ...It is important to note that conditions in southeastern Turkey during the YD were different from those in the coastal southern Levant where drought and cold temperatures during the YD were less dramatic (Jones et al. 2007; Decker et al. 2009)....

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  • ...In some studies from the Near East, no clear YD event can be identified (e.g. Bottema 1995; Decker et al. 2009), indicating that its impact on the climate was not uniform throughout the entire region....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report new archaeobotanical evidence from Shubayqa 1, a Natufian site located in northeastern Jordan (14.6-11.5 ka cal. BP).

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the Byzantine and Early Islamic western Negev Desert communities during the 4th-8th centuries CE is presented, based on 33 pollen samples and hundreds of charcoal remains that were recovered from the villages of Shivta and Nitzana.

24 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the conversion of radiocarbon ages to calibrated (cal) ages for the interval 24,000-0 cal BP (Before Present, 0 cal BP = AD 1950) is discussed.
Abstract: The focus of this paper is the conversion of radiocarbon ages to calibrated (cal) ages for the interval 24,000-0 cal BP (Before Present, 0 cal BP = AD 1950), based upon a sample set of dendrochronologically dated tree rings, uranium-thorium dated corals, and varve-counted marine sediment. The 14C age-cal age information, produced by many laboratories, is converted to 14C profiles and calibration curves, for the atmosphere as well as the oceans. We discuss offsets in measured 14C ages and the errors therein, regional 14C age differences, tree-coral 14C age comparisons and the time dependence of marine reservoir ages, and evaluate decadal vs. single-year 14C results. Changes in oceanic deepwater circulation, especially for the 16,000-11,000 cal BP interval, are reflected in the Δ 14C values of INTCAL98.

4,300 citations


"Vegetation development and human oc..." refers background in this paper

  • ...0, test version 6 (Stuiver et al. 1998) reconstruction back to the Late Pleistocene....

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Journal ArticleDOI

1,397 citations


"Vegetation development and human oc..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Herbs are represented by Artemisia, Asteraceae, Chenopodiaceae, Poaceae, Papaveraceae and Table 4 List of seeds and fruits from Baaz; the lowermost strata IV and V were without fruits and seeds Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 Baaz 2004 19/134 19/134 19/134 21/34 19/134 20/34 19/31 19/31 19/31 19/31 97 143 Z 853 320 249 559 932 379 387 390 I II II IIIa IIIa IIIa V IV IV IV cf. Alkanna, fragment, uncarbonized 1 Astragalus sp. 1 5 1 1 2 Chenopodium, uncarbonized 1 Fabaceae, small 4 3 Hordeum cf. murinum 1 Kickxia cf. spuria 1 Plantago sp. 1 No fruits and seeds Poaceae, awn fragment 1 Poaceae, culm node, fragment 1 cf. Poaceae, fragment 1 Rosaceae, Prunoideae, fragment 1 Vitis vinifera, uncarbonized 1 indet., fragments 1 1 1 Fig....

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  • ...More indications of a relatively open vegetation are the findings of Plantago and Kickxia (Zohary 1973)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a high resolution study of the oxygen and carbon isotopic composition (1500 measurement pairs) of speleothems from the Soreq cave, Israel, with chronology provided by 53 precise TIMS ages was performed.

648 citations


"Vegetation development and human oc..." refers background in this paper

  • ...The next occupations took place during extreme arid conditions, ca. 23– 21 kyr B.P., and probably during the Last Glacial Maximum when a steppe vegetation was established....

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  • ...The lack of pollen, however, may be related to the extreme drought that occurred around 25 kyr B.P. (Bar-Matthews et al. 1999)....

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  • ...when improved conditions for plant growth occurred (van Zeist and Bottema 1982, 1991; Roberts and Wright 1993; Bar-Matthews et al. 1999), or whether there was a delay in woodland expansion until after the Younger Dryas as suggested by Meadows (2005); Robinson et al....

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  • ...The pollen data from stratum VII and VI at Baaz indicate the presence of much Pinus pollen, which may correlate with relatively moist conditions as were visible in the Soreq Cave record (Bar-Matthews et al. 1999)....

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  • ...The earliest occupational levels correspond with a moisture peak during the Late Pleistocene, between ca. 34–32 kyr B.P., when pine expanded....

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Trending Questions (2)
What is the history of occupation in Syria?

The paper provides information about the occupation history in the Damascus region of Syria during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene periods. However, it does not provide a comprehensive history of occupation in Syria as a whole.

Is there vegetation in himadri?

These remains provide new information about the vegetation evolution in this region.