Barker, G. and Adams, R. and Creighton, O. and el-Rishi, H. and Gilbertson, D. and Grattan, J. and Hunt, C. and Newson, P. and Pyatt, B. and Reynolds, Tim (2007) Chalcolithic (c.5000 – 3600 cal. BC) and Bronze Age (c. 3600 – 1200 cal. BC) settlement in Wadi Faynan: Metallurgy and social complexity. In: Barker, G. and Gilbertson, D. and Mattingly, D. (eds.) Archaeology and Desertification. The Wadi Faynan Landscape Survey, Southern Jordan. Amman, Jordan: Council for British Research in the Levant, pp. 227-270. ISBN 9781842172865.
Abstract
Book synopsis: The Wadi Faynan is a harshly beautiful and desertic landscape in southern Jordan, situated between the hyper-arid deserts of the Wadi 'Arabah and the rugged and wetter Mountains of Edom. Archaeology and Desertification presents the results of the Wadi Faynan Landscape Survey, an inter-disciplinary study of landscape change undertaken in the Wadi Faynan by a team of archaeologists and geographers with the goal of contributing to present-day desertification debates by providing a long-term perspective on the relationship between environmental change and human history. The Wadi Faynan was the focus for some of the earliest farming in the Near East, and the earliest metallurgy, and in Roman times was a centre for copper and lead mining. The project reveals how past communities of farmers, shepherds, and miners managed their challenging environment, the solutions they developed, their successes and failures, and their short- and long-term environmental impacts. The richness of the palaeoclimatic, archaeological and palaeoecological data reveals an environmental/cultural history of complex pathways, synergies, and feedbacks operating at many different geographical scales, rates, and intensities. The project's findings on the complexity of past and present people:environment relations in the Wadi Faynan affirm the power of inter-disciplinary landscape archaeology to contribute significantly to the desertification debate. With global warming likely to threaten the lives of millions of people in the semi-arid and arid lands that comprise over a third of the planet through the course of this century, with potentially dire consequences for adjacent populations in better-watered regions, understanding the complexity of past responses to aridification has never been more urgent.
Metadata
Item Type: | Book Section |
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School: | Birkbeck Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > School of Historical Studies |
Depositing User: | Sarah Hall |
Date Deposited: | 27 Mar 2017 12:41 |
Last Modified: | 02 Aug 2023 17:32 |
URI: | https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/18484 |
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