TY - JOUR
T1 - Late Quaternary sea-level changes and early human societies in the central and eastern Mediterranean Basin
T2 - An interdisciplinary review
AU - Benjamin, J.
AU - Rovere, A.
AU - Fontana, A.
AU - Furlani, S.
AU - Vacchi, M.
AU - Inglis, R. H.
AU - Galili, E.
AU - Antonioli, F.
AU - Sivan, D.
AU - Miko, S.
AU - Mourtzas, N.
AU - Felja, I.
AU - Meredith-Williams, M.
AU - Goodman-Tchernov, B.
AU - Kolaiti, E.
AU - Anzidei, M.
AU - Gehrels, R.
N1 - Funding Information: The authors would like to thank INQUA for funding the MEDFLOOD community, particularly for providing early career scholars with an opportunity to attend MEDFLOOD workshops and field excursions through travel bursaries (INQUA Projects MEDFLOOD and MEDFLOOD MOPP, 1203P and1603P). Further acknowledgement are extended to the Institutional Strategy of the University of Bremen, funded by the German Excellence Initiative ( ABPZuK-03/2014 ) and by ZMT, the Center for Tropical Marine Ecology as well as to the Labex Archimende ( ANR-11-LABX-0032-01 , France). RHI and MGMW were supported by the European Research Council through ERC Advanced Grant 269586 . RHI also gratefully acknowledges funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 660343 . Flinders University, Faculty of Education, Humanities and Law provided funding for the article's lead author through the EHL Establishment Grant scheme. Data in Fig.2. is a part of research funded by the Croatian Science Foundation(HRZZ) project no. 9419 LoLADRIA. The University of Haifa is acknowledged for help in organizing the 2014 MEDFLOOD workshop, where the first draft of this paper was conceived. Funding Information: The authors would like to thank INQUA for funding the MEDFLOOD community, particularly for providing early career scholars with an opportunity to attend MEDFLOOD workshops and field excursions through travel bursaries (INQUA Projects MEDFLOOD and MEDFLOOD MOPP, 1203P and1603P). Further acknowledgement are extended to the Institutional Strategy of the University of Bremen, funded by the German Excellence Initiative (ABPZuK-03/2014) and by ZMT, the Center for Tropical Marine Ecology as well as to the Labex Archimende (ANR-11-LABX-0032-01, France). RHI and MGMW were supported by the European Research Council through ERC Advanced Grant 269586. RHI also gratefully acknowledges funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sk?odowska-Curie grant agreement No. 660343. Flinders University, Faculty of Education, Humanities and Law provided funding for the article's lead author through the EHL Establishment Grant scheme. Data in Fig.2. is a part of research funded by the Croatian Science Foundation(HRZZ) project no. 9419 LoLADRIA. The University of Haifa is acknowledged for help in organizing the 2014 MEDFLOOD workshop, where the first draft of this paper was conceived. Publisher Copyright: © 2017 The Authors
PY - 2017/8/25
Y1 - 2017/8/25
N2 - This article reviews key data and debates focused on relative sea-level changes since the Last Interglacial (approximately the last 132,000 years) in the Mediterranean Basin, and their implications for past human populations. Geological and geomorphological landscape studies are critical to archaeology. Coastal regions provide a wide range of resources to the populations that inhabit them. Coastal landscapes are increasingly the focus of scholarly discussions from the earliest exploitation of littoral resources and early hominin cognition, to the inundation of the earliest permanently settled fishing villages and eventually, formative centres of urbanisation. In the Mediterranean, these would become hubs of maritime transportation that gave rise to the roots of modern seaborne trade. As such, this article represents an original review of both the geo-scientific and archaeological data that specifically relate to sea-level changes and resulting impacts on both physical and cultural landscapes from the Palaeolithic until the emergence of the Classical periods. Our review highlights that the interdisciplinary links between coastal archaeology, geomorphology and sea-level changes are important to explain environmental impacts on coastal human societies and human migration. We review geological indicators of sea level and outline how archaeological features are commonly used as proxies for measuring past sea levels, both gradual changes and catastrophic events. We argue that coastal archaeologists should, as a part of their analyses, incorporate important sea-level concepts, such as indicative meaning. The interpretation of the indicative meaning of Roman fishtanks, for example, plays a critical role in reconstructions of late Holocene Mediterranean sea levels. We identify avenues for future work, which include the consideration of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) in addition to coastal tectonics to explain vertical movements of coastlines, more research on Palaeolithic island colonisation, broadening of Palaeolithic studies to include materials from the entire coastal landscape and not just coastal resources, a focus on rescue of archaeological sites under threat by coastal change, and expansion of underwater archaeological explorations in combination with submarine geomorphology. This article presents a collaborative synthesis of data, some of which have been collected and analysed by the authors, as the MEDFLOOD (MEDiterranean sea-level change and projection for future FLOODing) community, and highlights key sites, data, concepts and ongoing debates.
AB - This article reviews key data and debates focused on relative sea-level changes since the Last Interglacial (approximately the last 132,000 years) in the Mediterranean Basin, and their implications for past human populations. Geological and geomorphological landscape studies are critical to archaeology. Coastal regions provide a wide range of resources to the populations that inhabit them. Coastal landscapes are increasingly the focus of scholarly discussions from the earliest exploitation of littoral resources and early hominin cognition, to the inundation of the earliest permanently settled fishing villages and eventually, formative centres of urbanisation. In the Mediterranean, these would become hubs of maritime transportation that gave rise to the roots of modern seaborne trade. As such, this article represents an original review of both the geo-scientific and archaeological data that specifically relate to sea-level changes and resulting impacts on both physical and cultural landscapes from the Palaeolithic until the emergence of the Classical periods. Our review highlights that the interdisciplinary links between coastal archaeology, geomorphology and sea-level changes are important to explain environmental impacts on coastal human societies and human migration. We review geological indicators of sea level and outline how archaeological features are commonly used as proxies for measuring past sea levels, both gradual changes and catastrophic events. We argue that coastal archaeologists should, as a part of their analyses, incorporate important sea-level concepts, such as indicative meaning. The interpretation of the indicative meaning of Roman fishtanks, for example, plays a critical role in reconstructions of late Holocene Mediterranean sea levels. We identify avenues for future work, which include the consideration of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) in addition to coastal tectonics to explain vertical movements of coastlines, more research on Palaeolithic island colonisation, broadening of Palaeolithic studies to include materials from the entire coastal landscape and not just coastal resources, a focus on rescue of archaeological sites under threat by coastal change, and expansion of underwater archaeological explorations in combination with submarine geomorphology. This article presents a collaborative synthesis of data, some of which have been collected and analysed by the authors, as the MEDFLOOD (MEDiterranean sea-level change and projection for future FLOODing) community, and highlights key sites, data, concepts and ongoing debates.
KW - Holocene
KW - Mediterranean Archaeology
KW - Pleistocene
KW - Sea-level change
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85025476615&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2017.06.025
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2017.06.025
M3 - Review article
SN - 1040-6182
VL - 449
SP - 29
EP - 57
JO - Quaternary International
JF - Quaternary International
ER -