Riehl Simone, Pustovoytov Konstantin E, Weippert Heike, Klett Stefan, Hole Frank
Institute for Archaeological Science and Senckenberg Center for Human Evolution and Palaeoecology, University of Tübingen, 72070 Tübingen, Germany;
Institute of Soil Science and Land Evaluation, University of Hohenheim, 70593 Stuttgart, Germany; and.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Aug 26;111(34):12348-53. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1409516111. Epub 2014 Aug 11.
The collapse and resilience of political systems in the ancient Near East and their relationship with agricultural development have been of wide interest in archaeology and anthropology. Despite attempts to link the archaeological evidence to local paleoclimate data, the precise role of environmental conditions in ancient agricultural production remains poorly understood. Recently, stable isotope analysis has been used for reconstructing site-specific ancient growing conditions for crop species in semiarid and arid landscapes. To open the discussion of the role of regional diversity in past agricultural production as a factor in societal development, we present 1.037 new stable carbon isotope measurements from 33 archaeological sites and modern fields in the geographic area of the Fertile Crescent, spanning the Aceramic Neolithic [10,000 calibrated years (cal) B.C.] to the later Iron Age (500 cal B.C.), alongside modern data from 13 locations. Our data show that drought stress was an issue in many agricultural settlements in the ancient Near East, particularly in correlation with the major Holocene climatic fluctuations, but its regional impact was diverse and influenced by geographic factors. Although cereals growing in the coastal areas of the northern Levant were relatively unaffected by Holocene climatic fluctuations, farmers of regions further inland had to apply irrigation to cope with increased water stress. However, inland agricultural strategies showed a high degree of variability. Our findings suggest that regional differences in climatic effects led to diversified strategies in ancient subsistence and economy even within spatially limited cultural units.
古代近东地区政治体系的兴衰及其与农业发展的关系,一直是考古学和人类学广泛关注的课题。尽管人们试图将考古证据与当地古气候数据联系起来,但环境条件在古代农业生产中的确切作用仍知之甚少。最近,稳定同位素分析已被用于重建半干旱和干旱地区特定遗址的古代作物生长条件。为了开启关于区域多样性在过去农业生产中作为社会发展因素所起作用的讨论,我们展示了来自新月沃地地理区域内33个考古遗址和现代田地的1037个新的稳定碳同位素测量数据,时间跨度从无陶新石器时代(公元前10000年校准年)到铁器时代晚期(公元前500年校准年),同时还有来自13个地点的现代数据。我们的数据表明,干旱胁迫在古代近东的许多农业定居点都是一个问题,特别是与全新世主要气候波动相关,但它的区域影响是多样的,并受地理因素影响。尽管生长在黎凡特北部沿海地区的谷物相对不受全新世气候波动的影响,但内陆地区的农民不得不采用灌溉来应对增加的水分胁迫。然而,内陆农业策略表现出高度的变异性。我们的研究结果表明,气候影响的区域差异导致了古代生存和经济策略的多样化,即使在空间有限的文化单元内也是如此。