全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...
-  2019 

Holocene cultural and climate shifts in NW Africa as inferred from stable isotopes of archeological land snail shells

DOI: 10.1177/0959683619831424

Keywords: 8.2 ka event,Algeria,Capsian,paleoclimate,stable isotopes,terrestrial gastropods

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

Cultural transitions or even societal collapses have often been associated with long-term drought events. Linkages between humans and the environment are best documented in well-constrained archeological records that offer multi-centennial to multi-millennial cultural and paleoclimate data. Two Holocene Capsian sites, Kef Zoura D and A?n Misteheyia, from NE Algeria document a marked change in subsistence strategies near 8200 cal. yr BP. Radiocarbon dated archeological shells (from 10,300 to 6700 cal. yr BP) of the terrestrial gastropod Helix melanostoma were studied to examine the role of climate change on cultural shifts. Oxygen (δ18O) and carbon (δ13C) stable isotopes were measured from whole shells and time-series profiles along shell ontogeny to assess average annual paleoclimate and degree of seasonality, respectively. Shell δ18O values illustrate that conditions were wetter between 10,300 and 9000 cal. yr BP, coinciding with the ‘African Humid Period’, whereas the environment turned drier at 8000–7600 cal. yr BP, immediately after the 8.2-ka climate event, feasibly comparable in magnitude to the drought episode initiated in 1968 in the Sahel and N Africa. A snail evaporative steady-state flux balance-mixing model suggests that snails at around 8000 years ago precipitated shells under notably lower relative humidity conditions than previous wetter scenarios of the earlier Holocene. The well-known 8.2 ka cold event of the Northern Hemisphere was detected as a drought event that seems to have lasted several centuries in Algeria. The δ13C values indicate that snails only consumed and assimilated C3 plants without noticeable shifts. This study points to multi-millennial humidity fluctuations in NE Algeria, which likely affected the economy and subsistence strategies of prehistoric human groups in the area

Full-Text

Contact Us

service@oalib.com

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133