Understanding the evolution of the Holocene Pluvial Phase and its impact on Neolithic populations in south-east Arabia

The early to mid‐Holocene has long been recognised as a period of wetter climate with widespread lacustrine development and vegetation expansion throughout south‐east Arabia. Recent palaeoclimate data has, however, transformed our understanding of the Holocene Pluvial Phase (HPP) and evidence presen...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Arabian archaeology and epigraphy Vol. 24; no. 1; pp. 87 - 94
Main Authors: Preston, Gareth W., Parker, Adrian G.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Malden Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-05-2013
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Summary:The early to mid‐Holocene has long been recognised as a period of wetter climate with widespread lacustrine development and vegetation expansion throughout south‐east Arabia. Recent palaeoclimate data has, however, transformed our understanding of the Holocene Pluvial Phase (HPP) and evidence presented in this paper demonstrates that climate was neither homogeneous during the period, nor were shifts between pluvial and arid episodes synchronous across the region. This dynamic setting provided the backdrop for human expansion during the Neolithic, and in turn raises important questions about the interactions between these populations and the natural environment in south‐east Arabia.
Bibliography:ArticleID:AAE12006
ark:/67375/WNG-G4SR8S1G-P
istex:511807FD3AEC1BB1F0814B45EE6494EA88E34A60
ISSN:0905-7196
1600-0471
DOI:10.1111/aae.12006