20,000 years of societal vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in southwest Asia.
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Authors
Abu-Jaber, Nizar
AlShdaifat, Ahmad
Baird, Douglas
Cook, Benjamin I
Djamali, Morteza
Eastwood, Warren
Fleitmann, Dominik
Haywood, Alan
Kwiecien, Ola
Maher, Lisa A
Metcalfe, Sarah E
Parker, Adrian
Primmer, Nick
Richter, Tobias
Roberts, Neil
Tindall, Julia C
Ünal-İmer, Ezgi
Publication Date
2019Journal Title
WIREs Water
ISSN
2049-1948
Publisher
Wiley
Volume
6
Issue
2
Pages
e1330
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Jones, M. D., Abu-Jaber, N., AlShdaifat, A., Baird, D., Cook, B. I., Cuthbert, M. O., Dean, J. R., et al. (2019). 20,000 years of societal vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in southwest Asia.. WIREs Water, 6 (2), e1330. https://doi.org/10.1002/wat2.1330
Abstract
The Fertile Crescent, its hilly flanks and surrounding drylands has been a critical region for studying how climate has influenced societal change, and this review focuses on the region over the last 20,000 years. The complex social, economic, and environmental landscapes in the region today are not new phenomena and understanding their interactions requires a nuanced, multidisciplinary understanding of the past. This review builds on a history of collaboration between the social and natural palaeoscience disciplines. We provide a multidisciplinary, multiscalar perspective on the relevance of past climate, environmental, and archaeological research in assessing present day vulnerabilities and risks for the populations of southwest Asia. We discuss the complexity of palaeoclimatic data interpretation, particularly in relation to hydrology, and provide an overview of key time periods of palaeoclimatic interest. We discuss the critical role that vegetation plays in the human-climate-environment nexus and discuss the implications of the available palaeoclimate and archaeological data, and their interpretation, for palaeonarratives of the region, both climatically and socially. We also provide an overview of how modelling can improve our understanding of past climate impacts and associated change in risk to societies. We conclude by looking to future work, and identify themes of "scale" and "seasonality" as still requiring further focus. We suggest that by appreciating a given locale's place in the regional hydroscape, be it an archaeological site or palaeoenvironmental archive, more robust links to climate can be made where appropriate and interpretations drawn will demand the resolution of factors acting across multiple scales. This article is categorized under:Human Water > Water as Imagined and RepresentedScience of Water > Water and Environmental ChangeWater and Life > Nature of Freshwater Ecosystems.
Keywords
Holocene, Iran, Levant, Turkey, archaeology, hydrology, palaeoclimate
Sponsorship
European Research Council (648609)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/wat2.1330
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/288207
Rights
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http://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
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