300-year drought frames Late Bronze Age to Early Iron Age transition in the Near East: new palaeoecological data from Cyprus and Syria

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Titre300-year drought frames Late Bronze Age to Early Iron Age transition in the Near East: new palaeoecological data from Cyprus and Syria
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursKaniewski D, Marriner N, Bretschneider J, Jans G, Morhange C, Cheddadi R, Otto T, Luce F, Van Campo E
JournalREGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
Volume19
Pagination2287-2297
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1436-3798
Mots-clés2 ka BP event, 3, climate change, Drought, Eastern Mediterranean, Famine, Food shortages, Late Bronze Age crisis
Résumé

In Eastern Mediterranean history, 1200 BCE is a symbolic date. Its significance is tied to the important upheavals that destabilised regional-scale economic systems, leading to the dislocation of mighty Empires and, finally, to the ``demise'' of a societal model (termed ``the Crisis Years''). Recent studies have suggested that a centuries-long drought, of regional scale, termed the 3.2 ka BP event, could be one of the motors behind this spiral of decline. Here, we focus on this pivotal period, coupling new palaeoenvironmental data and radiocarbon dates from Syria (the site of Tell Tweini) and Cyprus (the site of Pyla-Kokkinokremnos), to probe whether climate change accelerated changes in the Eastern Mediterranean's Old World, by inducing crop failures/low harvests, possibly engendering severe food shortages and even famine. We show that the Late Bronze Age crisis and the following Dark Ages were framed by an \~ 300-year drought episode that significantly impacted crop yields and may have led to famine. Our data underline the agro-productive sensitivity of ancient Mediterranean societies to environmental changes, as well as the potential link between adverse climate pressures and harvest/famine.

DOI10.1007/s10113-018-01460-w