DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
.......................
Decline
of bronze age 'megacities' linked to climate change
Decline
of bronze age 'megacities' linked to climate change
Date:
February 26,
2014
Source:
University of Cambridge
Summary:
Scientists have demonstrated that an abrupt weakening
of the summer monsoon affected northwest India 4,100 years ago. The resulting
drought coincided with the beginning of the decline of the metropolis-building
Indus Civilization, which spanned present-day Pakistan and India, suggesting
that climate change could be why many of the major cities of the civilization
were abandoned
............................
Scientists
from the University of Cambridge have demonstrated that an abrupt weakening of
the summer monsoon affected northwest India 4,100 years ago. The resulting
drought coincided with the beginning of the decline of the metropolis-building
Indus Civilisation, which spanned present-day Pakistan and India, suggesting
that climate change could be why many of the major cities of the civilisation
were abandoned.
The
research, reported online on 25 February, 2014, in the journal Geology,
involved the collection of snail shells preserved in the sediments of an
ancient lake bed. By analysing the oxygen isotopes in the shells, the
scientists were able to tell how much rain fell in the lake where the snails
lived thousands of years ago.
The results
shed light on a mystery surrounding why the major cities of the Indus
Civilisation (also known as the Harappan Civilisation, after Harappa, one of
the five cities) were abandoned. Climate change had been suggested as a
possible reason for this transformation before but, until now, there has been
no direct evidence for climate change in the region where Indus settlements
were located.
Moreover,
the finding now links the decline of the Indus cities to a documented global
scale climate event and its impact on the Old Kingdom in Egypt, the Early
Bronze Age civilisations of Greece and Crete, and the Akkadian Empire in
Mesopotamia, whose decline has previously been linked to abrupt climate change.
"We
think that we now have a really strong indication that a major climate event
occurred in the area where a large number of Indus settlements were
situated," said Professor David Hodell, from Cambridge's Department of
Earth Sciences. "Taken together with other evidence from Meghalaya in
northeast India, Oman and the Arabian Sea, our results provide strong evidence
for a widespread weakening of the Indian summer monsoon across large parts of
India 4,100 years ago."
Hodell
together with University of Cambridge archaeologist Dr Cameron Petrie and Gates
scholar Dr Yama Dixit collected Melanoides tuberculata snail shells from
the sediments of the ancient lake Kotla Dahar in Haryana, India. "As
today, the major source of water into the lake throughout the Holocene is
likely to have been the summer monsoon," said Dixit. "But we have
observed that there was an abrupt change, when the amount of evaporation from
the lake exceeded the rainfall -- indicative of a drought."
At this time
large parts of modern Pakistan and much of western India was home to South
Asia's great Bronze Age urban society. As Petrie explained: "The major
cities of the Indus civilisation flourished in the mid-late 3rd and early 2nd
millennium BC. Large proportions of the population lived in villages, but many
people also lived in 'megacities' that were 80 hectares or more in size --
roughly the size of 100 football pitches. They engaged in elaborate crafts,
extensive local trade and long-ranging trade with regions as far away as the
modern-day Middle East. But, by the mid 2nd millennium BC, all of the great
urban centres had dramatically reduced in size or been abandoned."
Many
possible causes have been suggested, including the claim that major glacier-fed
rivers changed their course, dramatically affecting the water supply and the
reliant agriculture. It has also been suggested that an increasing population
level caused problems, there was invasion and conflict, or that climate change
caused a drought that large cities could not withstand long-term.
"We
know that there was a clear shift away from large populations living in
megacities," said Petrie. "But precisely what happened to the Indus
Civilisation has remained a mystery. It is unlikely that there was a single
cause, but a climate change event would have induced a whole host of knock-on
effects.
"We have
lacked well-dated local climate data, as well as dates for when perennial water
flowed and stopped in a number of now abandoned river channels, and an
understanding of the spatial and temporal relationships between settlements and
their environmental contexts. A lot of the archaeological debate has really
been well-argued speculation."
The new
data, collected with funding from the Natural Environment Research Council,
show a decreased summer monsoon rainfall at the same time that archaeological
records and radiocarbon dates suggest the beginning of the Indus
de-urbanisation. From 6,500 to 5,800 years ago, a deep fresh-water lake existed
at Kotla Dahar. The deep lake transformed to a shallow lake after 5,800 years
ago, indicating a weakening of the Indian summer monsoon. But an abrupt monsoon
weakening occurred 4,100 years ago for 200 years and the lake became ephemeral
after this time.
Until now,
the suggestion that climate change might have had an impact on the Indus
Civilisation was based on data showing a lessening of the monsoon in Oman and
the Arabian Sea, which are both located at a considerable distance from Indus
Civilisation settlements and at least partly affected by different weather
systems.
Hodell and
Dixit used isotope geochemical analysis of shells as a proxy for tracing the
climate history of the region. Oxygen exists in two forms -- the lighter 16O
and a heavier 18O variant. When water evaporates from a closed lake
(one that is fed by rainfall and rivers but has no outflow), molecules containing
the lighter isotope evaporate at a faster rate than those containing the
heavier isotopes; at times of drought, when the evaporation exceeds rainfall,
there is a net increase in the ratio of 18O to 16O of the
water. Organisms living in the lake record this ratio when they incorporate
oxygen into the calcium carbonate (CaCO3) of their shells, and can
therefore be used, in conjunction with radiocarbon dating, to reconstruct the
climate of the region thousands of years ago.
Speculating
on the effect lessening rainfall would have had on the Indus Civilisation,
Petrie said: "Archaeological records suggest they were masters of many
trades. They used elaborate techniques to produce a range of extremely
impressive craft products using materials like steatite, carnelian and gold,
and this material was widely distributed within South Asia, but also
internationally. Each city had substantial fortification walls, civic
amenities, craft workshops and possibly also palaces. Houses were arranged on
wide main streets and narrow alleyways, and many had their own wells and
drainage systems. Water was clearly an integral part of urban planning, and was
also essential for supporting the agricultural base.
At around
the time we see the evidence for climatic change, archaeologists have found
evidence of previously maintained streets start to fill with rubbish, over time
there is a reduced sophistication in the crafts they used, the script that had
been used for several centuries disappears and there were changes in the location
of settlements, suggesting some degree of demographic shift."
"We
estimate that the climate event lasted about 200 years before recovering to the
previous conditions, which we still see today, and we believe that the
civilisation somehow had to cope with this prolonged period of drought,"
said Hodell.
The new
research is part of a wider joint project led by the University of Cambridge
and Banaras Hindu University in India, which has been funded by the British
Council UK-India Education and Research Initiative to investigate the
archaeology, river systems and climate of north-west India using a combination
of archaeology and geoscience. The multidisciplinary project hopes to provide
new understanding of the relationships between humans and their environment,
and also involves researchers at Imperial College London, the University of
Oxford, the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur and the Uttar Pradesh State
Archaeology Department.
"It is
essential to understand the link between human settlement, water resources and
landscape in antiquity, and this research is an important step in that
direction," explained Petrie. "We hope that this will hold lessons
for us as we seek to find means of dealing with climate change in our own and
future generations."
Story Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Cambridge. The original story is
licensed under a Creative
Commons Licence. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Y. Dixit, D. A. Hodell, C. A. Petrie. Abrupt weakening of the summer monsoon in northwest India 4100 yr ago. Geology, 2014; DOI: 10.1130/G35236.1