Department of Archaeology, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, 07745 Jena, Germany;
Human Origins Program, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Apr 14;117(15):8263-8270. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1920211117.
Recent interdisciplinary archaeological and paleoenvironmental research in the Arabian peninsula is transforming our understanding of ancient human societies in their ecological contexts. Hypotheses about the cultural and demographic impacts of a series of droughts have primarily been developed from the environmental and archaeological records of southeastern Arabia. Here we examine these human-environment interactions by integrating ongoing research from northern Arabia. While droughts and extreme environmental variability in the Holocene had significant impacts on human societies, responses varied across space and time and included mobility at various scales, as well as diverse social, economic and cultural adaptations, such as the management of water resources, the introduction of pastoral lifeways, and the construction of diverse types of stone structures. The long-term story of human societies in Arabia is one of resilience in the face of climate change, yet future challenges include rising temperatures and flash flooding. The history of human responses to climatic and ecosystem changes in Arabia can provide important lessons for a planet facing catastrophic global warming and environmental change.
近年来,阿拉伯半岛上的跨学科考古学和古环境研究正在改变我们对人类社会在其生态环境中的理解。关于一系列干旱对文化和人口产生影响的假设,主要是根据阿拉伯半岛东南部的环境和考古记录得出的。在这里,我们通过整合来自阿拉伯北部的正在进行的研究来检验这些人类与环境的相互作用。尽管全新世的干旱和极端环境变化对人类社会产生了重大影响,但这些反应在空间和时间上有所不同,包括在不同规模上的流动性,以及多样化的社会、经济和文化适应,例如水资源管理、引入游牧生活方式以及建造各种类型的石结构。阿拉伯半岛人类社会的长期历史是面对气候变化时具有弹性的一个例子,但未来的挑战包括气温上升和突发洪水。人类对阿拉伯地区气候和生态系统变化的反应历史,可以为面临灾难性全球变暖与环境变化的地球提供重要的经验教训。