Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-4hhp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-07T12:47:08.537Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

16 - Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction at Beidha, southern Jordan (c. 18,000–8,500 BP): Implications for human occupation during the Natufian and Pre-Pottery Neolithic

from Part IV - Human settlement, climate change, hydrology and water management

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2011

Claire Rambeau
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Bill Finlayson
Affiliation:
Council for British Research in the Levant (CBRL)
Sam Smith
Affiliation:
Oxford Brookes University
Stuart Black
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Robyn Inglis
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Stuart Robinson
Affiliation:
University College London
Steven Mithen
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Emily Black
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Get access

Summary

ABSTRACT

The Beidha archaeological site in Southern Jordan was occupied during the Natufian (two discrete occupation phases, c. 15,200–14,200 cal. BP and c. 13,600–13,200 cal. years BP) and Pre-Pottery B Neolithic periods (c. 10,300–8,600 cal. years BP). This chapter reconstructs the palaeoenvironments at Beidha during these periods, using sedimentological observations and the stable isotopic composition (oxygen and carbon) of carbonate deposits. Age control is provided by uranium-series and radiocarbon dating. Detailed analysis of a carbonate stratigraphic section related to a fossil spring close to the site, and a sequence of carbonate nodules from a section on the western edge of the archaeological site, permits a reconstruction of climatic variations between c. 18,000 and c. 8,500 years BP. The results of the palaeoenvironmental study are compared with the archaeological evidence, to explore the relationship between human occupation and climatic variability at Beidha. The results indicate a marked correspondence between more favourable (wetter) environmental conditions and phases of occupation at Beidha, and provide clues to the likely sources of water that sustained the settlement during the Late Pleistocene and early Holocene.

INTRODUCTION

Climate change during the Late Pleistocene–early Holocene is often seen as a key factor in the transition to sedentism and stable, agricultural societies in the Middle East, given the background of major events such as the start of the Younger Dryas and the Holocene (e.g. Moore and Hillman, 1992; Mithen, 2003; Cordova, 2007, see also Feynman and Ruzmaikin, 2007).

Type
Chapter
Information
Water, Life and Civilisation
Climate, Environment and Society in the Jordan Valley
, pp. 245 - 268
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Affek, H. P., Bar-Matthews, M., Ayalon, A., Matthews, A. and Eiler, J. M. (2008) Glacial/interglacial temperature variations in Soreq cave speleothems as recorded by ‘clumped isotope' thermometry. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72: 5351–5360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Al-Eisawi, D. (1985) Vegetation in Jordan. In Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan II, ed. Hadidi, A.. Amman: Department of Antiquities pp. 45–58.Google Scholar
Al-Eisawi, D. (1996) Vegetation of Jordan. Cairo: UNESCO Regional Office for Science and Technology for the Arab States.Google Scholar
Amit, R., Lekach, J., Ayalon, A., Porat, N. and Grodek, T. (2007) New insight into pedogenic processes in extremely arid environments and their paleoclimatic implications – the Negev Desert, Israel. Quaternary International 162: 61–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, J. E. (2006) Palaeoclimatic records from stable isotopes in riverine tufas: synthesis and review. Earth-Science Reviews 75: 85–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, J. E. and Brasier, A. T. (2005) Seasonal records of climatic change in annually laminated tufas: short review and future prospects. Journal of Quaternary Science 20: 411–421.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, J. E., Pedley, M. and Dennis, P. F. (1994) Stable isotope record of palaeoclimate change in a British Holocene tufa. Holocene 4: 349–355.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, J. E., Riding, R. and Dennis, P. F. (1997) The stable isotope record of environmental and climatic signals in modern terrestrial microbial carbonates from Europe. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 129: 171–189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, J. E., Pedley, M. and Dennis, P. F. (2000) Palaeoenvironmental records in Holocene Spanish tufas: a stable isotope approach in search of reliable climatic archives. Sedimentology 47: 961–978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banning, E. B. and Kohler-Rollefson, I. (1992) Ethnographic lessons for the pastoral past: camp locations and material remains near Beidha, Southern Jordan. In Pastoralism in the Levant: Archaeological Materials in Anthropological Perspectives, ed. Bar-Yosef, O. and Khazanov, A.. Madison WI: Prehistory Press pp. 181–204.Google Scholar
Bar-Matthews, M., Ayalon, A., Gilmour, M., Matthews, A. and Hawkesworth, C. J. (2003) Sea-land oxygen isotopic relationships from planktonic foraminifera and speleothems in the Eastern Mediterranean region and their implication for paleorainfall during interglacial intervals. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 67: 3181–3199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Matthews, M., Ayalon, A. and Kaufman, A. (1997) Late quaternary paleoclimate in the eastern Mediterranean region from stable isotope analysis of speleothems at Soreq Cave, Israel. Quaternary Research 47: 155–168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Matthews, M., Ayalon, A. and Kaufman, A. (2000) Timing and hydrological conditions of Sapropel events in the Eastern Mediterranean, as evident from speleothems, Soreq cave, Israel. Chemical Geology 169: 145–156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Matthews, M., Ayalon, A., Kaufman, A. and Wasserburg, G. J. (1999) The Eastern Mediterranean paleoclimate as a reflection of regional events: Soreq cave, Israel. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 166: 85–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Matthews, M., Ayalon, A., Matthews, A., Sass, E. and Halicz, L. (1996) Carbon and oxygen isotope study of the active water-carbonate system in a karstic Mediterranean cave: implications for paleoclimate research in semiarid regions. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 60: 337–347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. (1986) The walls of Jericho: an alternative interpretation. Current Anthropology 27: 157–162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. (1998) The Natufian culture in the Levant, threshold to the origins of agriculture. Evolutionary Anthropology 6: 159–177.3.0.CO;2-7>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. and Belfer-Cohen, A. (1999) Facing environmental crisis – societal and cultural changes at the transition from the Younger Dryas to the Holocene in the Levant. In The Dawn of Farming in the Near East, ed. Cappers, R. T. J. and Bottema, S.. Berlin: ex Oriente pp. 55–66.Google Scholar
Berger, J. F. and Guilaine, J. (2009) The 8200 cal BP abrupt environmental change and the Neolithic transition: a Mediterranean perspective. Quaternary International 200: 31–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyd, B. (2006) On ‘sedentism' in the later Epipalaeolithic (Natufian) Levant. World Archaeology 38: 164–178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brasier, A. T., Andrews, J., Marca-Bella, A. D. and Dennis, P. F. (2010) Depositional continuity of seasonally laminated tufas: implications for δ18O based palaeotemperatures. Global and Planetary Change 71: 160–167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byrd, B. F. (1989) The Natufian Encampment at Beidha: Late Pleistocene Adaptation in the Southern Levant Moesgard. Arhus: Jutland Archaeological Society.Google Scholar
Byrd, B. F. (2005a) Early Village Life at Beidha, Jordan: Neolithic Spatial Organization and Vernacular Architecture. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Byrd, B. F. (2005b) Reassessing the emergence of village life in the Near East. Journal of Archaeological Research 13: 231–290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Candy, I. and Black, S. (2009) The timing of Quaternary calcrete development in semi-arid southeast Spain: investigating the role of climate on calcrete genesis. Sedimentary Geology 218: 6–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Candy, I., Black, S. and Sellwood, B. (2005) U-series isochron dating of immature and mature calcretes as a basis for constructing Quaternary landform chronologies for the Sorbas basin, southeast Spain. Quaternary Research 64: 100–111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cerling, T. E. (1984) The stable isotopic composition of modern soil carbonate and its relation to climate. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 71: 229–240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cerling, T. E. and Quade, J. (1993) Stable carbon and oxygen isotopes in soil carbonates. In Proceedings of the Chapman Conference, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, ed. Swart, J., McKenzie, J. A. and Lohman, K. C.. Oxford: Elsevier Science Ltd pp. 217–231.Google Scholar
Chafetz, H. S. and Lawrence, J. R. (1994) Stable isotopic variability within modern travertines. Geographie Physique et Quaternaire 48: 257–273.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Comer, D. C. (2003) Environmental history at an early prehistoric village: an application of cultural site analysis at Beidha, in southern Jordan. Journal of GIS in Archaeology 1: 103–116.Google Scholar
Cordova, C. (2007) Millennial Landscape Change in Jordan: Geoarchaeology and Cultural Ecology. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Craig, H. (1965) The measurement of oxygen isotope palaeotemperatures. In Stable Isotopes in Oceanographic Studies and Palaeotemperatures, ed. Tongiorgi, E.. Pisa: Consiglio Nazionale Della Richerche, Laboratorio de Geologia Nucleare pp. 161–182.Google Scholar
Deutz, P., Montanez, I. P., Monger, H. C. and Morrison, J. (2001) Morphology and isotope heterogeneity of Late Quaternary pedogenic carbonates: implications for paleosol carbonates as paleoenvironmental proxies. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 166: 293–317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eikenberg, J., Vezzu, G., Zumsteg, I.et al. (2001) Precise two chronometer dating of Pleistocene travertine: the Th-230/U-234 and Ra-226(ex)/Ra-226(0) approach. Quaternary Science Reviews 20: 1935–1953.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emery-Barbier, A. (1995) Pollen analysis: environmental and climatic implications. In Prehistoric Cultural Ecology and Evolution: Insights from Southern Jordan, ed. Henry, D. O.. New York: Plenum Press pp. 375–384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enzel, Y., Arnit, R., Dayan, U.et al. (2008) The climatic and physiographic controls of the eastern Mediterranean over the late Pleistocene climates in the southern Levant and its neighboring deserts. Global and Planetary Change 60: 165–192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
,EXACT (Executive Action Team Middle East Water Data Banks Project) (1998). Overview of Middle East Water Resources – Water Resources of Palestinian, Jordanian, and Israeli Interest. http://water.usgs.gov/exact/overview/index.htm
Feynman, J. and Ruzmaikin, A. (2007) Climate stability and the development of agricultural societies. Climatic Change 84: 295–311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Field, J. (1989) Appendix A: geological setting at Beidha. In The Natufian Encampment at Beidha, Late Pleistocene Adaptation in the Southern Levant, ed. Byrd, B. F.. Aarhus: Jutland Archaeological Society pp. 86–90.Google Scholar
Fish, S. K. (1989) Appendix B: The Beidha pollen record. In The Natufian Encampment at Beidha, Late Pleistocene Adaptation in the Southern Levant, ed. Byrd, B. F.. Aarhus: Jutland Archaeological Society pp. 91–96.Google Scholar
Ford, T. D. and Pedley, H. M. (1996) A review of tufa and travertine deposits of the world. Earth Science Reviews 41: 117–175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garnett, E. R., Gilmour, M. A., Rowe, P. J., Andrews, J. E. and Preece, R. C. (2004) Th-230/U-234 dating of Holocene tufas: possibilities and problems. Quaternary Science Reviews 23: 947–958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrard, A., Colledge, S. and Martin, L. (1996) The emergence of crop cultivation and caprine herding in the ‘marginal zone' of the southern Levant. In The Origins and Spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia, ed. Harris, D. R.. London: University College pp. 204–226.Google Scholar
Gebel, H. G. K. and Starck, J. M. (1985) Investigations into the Stone Age of the Petra Area (Early Holocene Research): a preliminary report on the 1984 campaigns. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 29: 89–114.Google Scholar
Geyh, M. A. (2001) Reflections on the 230Th/U dating of dirty material. Geochronometria 20: 9–14.Google Scholar
Geyh, M. A. (2008) Selection of suitable data sets improves 230Th/U dates of dirty material. Geochronometria 30: 69–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodfriend, G. A. (1999) Terrestrial stable isotope records of Late Quaternary paleoclimates in the eastern Mediterranean region. Quaternary Science Reviews 18: 501–513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hays, P. D. and Grossman, E. L. (1991) Oxygen isotopes in meteoric calcite cements as indicators of continental palaeoclimate. Geology 19: 441–444.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helbaek, H. (1966) Appendix A – Pre-Pottery Neolithic farming at Beidha: a preliminary report. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 98: 61–66.Google Scholar
Henry, D. O. (1997) Prehistoric human ecology in the southern Levant east of the Rift from 20 000–6 000 BP. Paleorient 23: 107–119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hercman, H. and Goslar, T. (2002) Uranium-series and radiocarbon dating of speleothems – methods and limitations. Acta Geological Polonica 52: 35–41.Google Scholar
Hourani, F. and Courty, M.-A. (1997) L'évolution climatique de 10 500 à 5500 B.P. dans la vallée du Jourdain. Paleorient 23: 95–105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunt, C. O., Elrishi, H. A., Gilbertson, D. D.et al. (2004) Early-Holocene environments in the Wadi Faynan, Jordan. The Holocene 14: 921–930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkbride, D. (1960) The excavation of a Neolithic village at Seyl Aqlat, Beidha, near Petra. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 92: 136–145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkbride, D. (1966) Five seasons at the Pre-Pottery Neolithic village of Beidha in Jordan. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 98: 8–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkbride, D. (1968) Beidha: Early Neolithic village life south of the Dead Sea. Antiquity 42: 263–274.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkbride, D. (1985) The environment of the Petra region during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic. In Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan II, ed. Hadidi, A.. Amman: Department of Antiquities pp. 117–124.Google Scholar
Kirkbride, D. (1989) Preface. In The Natufian Encampment at Beidha, Late Pleistocene Adaptation in the Southern Levant, ed. Byrd, B. F.. Aarhus: Jutland Archaeological Society pp. 7–8.Google Scholar
Kujit, I. and Goring-Morris, A. N. (2002) Foraging, farming and social complexity in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic of the South-Central Levant: a review and synthesis. Journal of World Prehistory 16: 361–439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liutkus, C. M., Wright, J. D., Ashley, G. M. and Sikes, N. E. (2005) Paleoenvironmental interpretation of lake-margin deposits using δC-13 and δO-18 results from early Pleistocene carbonate rhizoliths, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Geology 33: 377–380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ludwig, K. R. (2001) ISOPLOT/Ex Rev. 2.49. Boulder, CO: United States Geological Survey.Google Scholar
Ludwig, K. R. and Titterington, D. M. (1994) Calculation of 230Th/U isochrons, ages, and errors. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 58: 5031–5042.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Magaritz, M. and Heller, J. (1980) A desert migration indicator – oxygen isotopic composition of land snail shells. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 32: 153–162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mallick, R. and Frank, N. (2002) A new technique for precise uranium-series dating of travertine micro-samples. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 66: 4261–4272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matsuoka, J., Kano, A., Oba, T.et al. (2001) Seasonal variation of stable isotopic compositions recorded in a laminated tufa, SW Japan. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 192: 31–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McLaren, S. J., Gilbertson, D. D., Grattan, J. P.et al. (2004) Quaternary palaeogeomorphologic evolution of the Wadi Faynan area, southern Jordan. Paleogeography Paleoclimatology Paleoecology 205: 131–154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mithen, S. J. (2003) After the Ice: A Global Human History, 20,000–5000 BC. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.Google Scholar
Moore, A. M. T. and Hillman, G. C. (1992) The Pleistocene to Holocene transition and human economy in Southwest Asia: the impact of the Younger Dryas. American Antiquity 57: 482–494.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mortensen, P. (1970) A preliminary study of the chipped stone industry from Beidha. Acta Archaeologica 41: 1–54.Google Scholar
Neumann, F. H., Kagan, E. J., Schwab, M. J. and Stein, M. (2007) Palynology, sedimentology and palaeoecology of the late Holocene Dead Sea. Quaternary Science Reviews 26: 1476–1498.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Brien, G. R., Kaufman, D. S., Sharp, W. D.et al. (2006) Oxygen isotope composition of annually banded modern and Mid-Holocene travertine and evidence of paleomonsoon floods, Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA. Quaternary Research 65: 366–379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Neil, J. R., Clayton, R. N. and Mayeda, T. K. (1969) Oxygen isotope fractionation of divalent metal carbonates. Journal of Chemical Physics 30: 5547–5558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olszewski, D. I. (1991) Social complexity in the Natufian? Assessing the relationship of ideas and data. In Perspectives on the Past: Theoretical Biases in Mediterranean Hunter-Gatherer Research, ed. Clark, G.. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press pp. 322–340.Google Scholar
Pedley, H. M. (1990) Classification and environmental models of cool freshwater tufas. Sedimentary Geology 68: 143–154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pedley, M., Martin, J. A. G., Delgado, S. O. and Cura, M. G. Del (2003) Sedimentology of Quaternary perched springline and paludal tufas: criteria for recognition, with examples from Guadalajara Province, Spain. Sedimentology 50: 23–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pentecost, A. (1995) The Quaternary travertine deposits of Europe and Asia Minor. Quaternary Science Reviews 14: 1005–1028.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perkins Jr, D. (1966) Appendix B – Fauna from Madamagh and Beidha: a preliminary report. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 98: 66–67.Google Scholar
Portillo, M., Albert, R. M. and Henry, D. O. (2009) Domestic activities and spatial distribution in Ain Abu Nukhayla (Wadi Rum, Southern Jordan): the use of phytoliths and spherulites studies. Quaternary International 193: 174–183.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quade, J., Rech, J. A., Latorre, C.et al. (2007) Soils at the hyperarid margin: the isotopic composition of soil carbonate from the Atacama Desert, Northern Chile. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 71: 3772–3795.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raikes, R. (1966) Appendix C – Beidha: prehistoric climate and water supply. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 98: 68–72.Google Scholar
Robinson, S. A., Black, S., Sellwood, B. and Valdes, P. J. (2006) A review of palaeoclimates and palaeoenvironments in the Levant and Eastern Mediterranean from 25,000 to 5000 years BP: setting the environmental background for the evolution of human civilisation. Quaternary Science Reviews 25: 1517–1541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rohling, E. J. and Palike, H. (2005) Centennial-scale climate cooling with a sudden cold event around 8,200 years ago. Nature 434: 975–979.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rollefson, G. (1998) The Aceramic Neolithic of Jordan. In The Prehistoric Archaeology of Jordan, ed. Henry, D. O.. Oxford: British Archaeology Reports pp. 102–126.Google Scholar
Rollefson, G. (2001) The Neolithic period. In The Archaeology of Jordan, ed. MacDonald, B., Adams, R. and Bienkowski, P.. Sheffield: Sheffield University Press pp. 67–105.Google Scholar
Rollefson, G. and Köhler-Rollefson, I. (1989) The collapse of early Neolithic settlements in the southern Levant. In People and Culture in Change: Proceedings of the Second Symposium on Upper Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic Populations of Europe and the Mediterranean Basin, ed. Hershkovitz, I.. Oxford: Oxbow pp. 73–89.Google Scholar
Rowe, P. J. and Maher, B. A. (2000) ‘Cold' stage formation of calcrete nodules in the Chinese Loess Plateau: evidence from U-series dating and stable isotope analysis. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 157: 109–125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rozanski, K., Araguas-Araguas, L. and Gonfiantini, R. (1993) Isotopic patterns in modern global precipitation. In Climate Change in Continental Isotopic Records, ed. Swart, P. K., Lohman, K. C., McKenzie, J. A. and Savin, S.. Washington, DC: American Geophysical Union pp. 1–36.Google Scholar
Sanlaville, P. (1996) Changements climatiques dans la région levantine à la fin du Pléistocène supérieur et au début de l'Holocène. Leurs relations avec l'évolution des sociétés humaines. Paleorient 22: 7–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanlaville, P. (1997) Les changements dans l'environnement au Moyen-Orient de 20 000 BP à 6 000 BP. Paleorient 23: 249–262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, J. R., Giegengack, R. and Schwarcz, H. P. (2004) Constraints on Pleistocene pluvial climates through stable-isotope analysis of fossil-spring tufas and associated gastropods, Kharga Oasis, Egypt. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 206: 157–175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soligo, M., Tuccimei, P., Barberi, R.et al. (2002) U/Th dating of freshwater travertine from Middle Velino Valley (Central Italy): paleoclimatic and geological implications. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 184: 147–161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staubwasser, M. and Weiss, H. (2006) Holocene climate and cultural evolution in late prehistoric-early historic West Asia – Introduction. Quaternary Research 66: 372–387.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, M., Torfstein, A., Gavrieli, I. and Yechieli, Y. (2010) Abrupt aridities and salt deposition in the post-glacial Dead Sea and their North Atlantic connection. Quaternary Science Reviews 29: 567–575.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stordeur, D., Helmer, D. and Willcox, G. (1997) Jerf el ahmar, un nouveau site de l'horizon PPNA sur le moyen Euphrate syrien. Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française 94: 282–285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tchernov, E. (1997) Are late Pleistocene environmental factors, faunal changes and cultural transformations causally connected? The case of the southern Levant. Paleorient 23: 209–228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weninger, B., Alram-Stern, E., Bauer, E.et al. (2006) Climate forcing due to the 8200 cal yr BP event observed at Early Neolithic sites in the eastern Mediterranean. Quaternary Research 66: 401–420.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zak, K., Lozek, V., Kadlec, J., Hladikova, J. and Cilek, V. (2002) Climate-induced changes in Holocene calcareous tufa formations, Bohemian Karst, Czech Republic. Quaternary International 91: 137–152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zanchetta, G., Di Vito, M., Fallick, A. E. and Sulpizio, R. (2000) Stable isotopes of pedogenic carbonates from the Somma-Vesuvius area, southern Italy, over the past 18 kyr: palaeoclimatic implications. Journal of Quaternary Science 15: 813–824.3.0.CO;2-Z>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zohary, M. (1962) Plant Life of Palestine: Israel and Jordan. New York: Roland Press.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×