Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 14 Mar 2011

An Analysis of the Possible Influence of Climate on Settlement Shifts across the Karak Plateau and Surrounding Region, Jordan: Chalcolithic through Umayyad Periods

Page Range: 193 – 205
DOI: 10.5555/arwg.7.3.y5023356q10v4254
Save
Download PDF

The physical setting of the Karak Plateau and surrounding region in west-central Jordan provides an excellent opportunity to analyze ancient settlement practices and patterns. The western upland region is typified by agriculturally productive soils, annual precipitation amounts near 500 mm, and physical isolation from regions to the north and south by virtue of the Wadis Mujib and Hasa. The rocky slopes of the Dead Sea escarpment and the arid conditions of the Syrian/Arabian desert define the region's western and eastern borders. This paper explores the movement of ancient site locations across this diverse landscape from the Chalcolithic through the Umayyad periods, against the backdrop of climate and climate change. Though ancient settlement decisions were made on the basis of numerous and often complex factors(environmental and socio-political), this investigation found a definite correlation between climatic conditions and site location decisions. With one exception (the Nabatean Period), site density was considerably lower during hot and dry periods and sites were located predominantly on the western uplands. In contrast, there was a dramatic increase both in site density and in distribution of sites across the entire region,including the eastern desert, during periods of increased precipitation and cooler temperatures. Though climate does not operate in isolation, its role in influencing ancient settlement decisions in the region of the Karak Plateau is obvious and suggests that the role of climate should be considered in all investigations of ancient Middle Eastern settlement patterns and site location decisions.

Baillie, M. G. L. 1994. Dendrochronology raises questions about the nature of theAD 536 dust veil event. Holocene 4:212–17.

Bar-Matthews, M., A. Ayalon, and A. Kaufman. 1998. Middle to Late Holocene (6,500 Yr. Period) paleoclimate in the eastern Mediterranean region from stable isotopic composition of speleothems from Soreq Cave, Israel. In Water, environment and society in times of climatic change, ed. A.S. Issar and N. Brown, 203–14. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.

Bayer, H. J., Z. El-Isa, K. Ringle, and G. Saffarini. 1988. Tensional and strike-slip tectonics in the Karak area (SE Dead Sea region): Results from tectonic and photogrammetric investigations. Neues Jahrbuck fur Geologie und Palaontlogie. Monatshefte 4:223–32.

Betts, A.V. G., and S.W. Helms. 1989. A water harvesting and storage system at Ibn el-Ghazzi in eastern Jordan:A preliminary report. Levant 21:3–11.

Courty, M.-A., and J.Vallverdu. 2001. The microstratigraphic record of abrupt climate changes in cave sediments of the western Mediterranean. Geoarchaeology: An International Journal 16:467–500.

Dearman, J. A. 1992. Settlement patterns and the beginning of the Iron Age in Moab. In Early Edom and Moab: The beginning of the Iron Age in southern Jordan, ed. P. Bienkowski, 65–76. Sheffield: J.R. Collis.

Donahue, J., B. Peer, and R. T. Schaub. 1997. The southern Dead Sea plain: Changing shorelines and their impact on settlement patterns through historical periods. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 6, ed.A. Hadidi, 127–36. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Edens, C., T. J. Wilkinson, and G. Barratt. 2000. Hammat al-Qa and the roots of urbanism in southwest Arabia. Antiquity 74:854–62.

Foss, J. E., J. S. Wah, S.Y. Lee, D. H. Phillips, Y. Roh, M. E. Essington, and C. A. Sriles. 1998. Soils of the al-Mudaybic archaeological site in Jordan. Agronomy Abstracts 257–58.

Frumkin, A., and Y. Elitzur. 2001. The rise and fall of the Dead Sea. Biblical Archaeology Review 27/6:42–50.

Frumkin, A., N. Greenbaum, and A. P. Schick. 1998. Paleohydrology of the northern Negev: Comparative evaluation of two catchments. In Water, environment and society in times of climatic change, ed. A. S. Issarand N. Brown, 97–111. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.

Green, M. D. 2002. A geographical analysis of Roman (64 B.C.E.–324 C.E.) and Umayyad (640–750 C.E.) Period site locations on the Karak Plateau, Jordan. Ph.D. dissertation, Indiana State University, Terre Haute, IN.

Greenbaum, N., A. P. Schick, and V. R. Baker. 2000. The paleoflood record of a hyperarid catchment, Nahal Zin, Negev Desert, Israel. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 25:951–71.

Guiraud, R., and W. Bosworth. 1999. Phanerozoic geodynamic evolution of northeastern Africa and the northwestern Arabian platform. Tectonophysics 315:73–108.

Harlan, J. R. 1985. The early Bronze Age environment of the southern Ghor and the Moab Plateau. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 2, ed.A. Hadidi, 125–29). Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Homes-Fredericq, D., M. De Dapper, and B.-M. De Vliegher. 1997. Al-Lahun:A geo-archaeological approach of the Belgian excavations in Jordan. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 6, ed. A. Hadidi, 57–65. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Issar, A. S. 1998. Climate change and history during the Holocene in the eastern Mediterranean region. In Water, environment and society in times of climatic change, ed. A. S. Issar and N. Brown, 113–28. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.

Issar, A. S., and N. Brown. 1998. Introduction. In Water, environment and society in times of climatic change, ed. A. S. Issar and N. Brown, ix–xvi. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.

Kennedy, D. L., and A. Peterson. 2004. Guardians of the pilgrim wells: Damascus to Aqaba. Saudi Aramco World 55/1, January/February.

Kirkbride, D. 1985. The environment of the Petra region during the pre-pottery Neolithic. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 2, ed.A. Hadidi, 117–24. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Lacelle, L. 1986. Surface and groundwater resources of Tell Hesban and area, Jordan. In Hesban, ed. L. T. Geraty, 60–73. Berrien Springs: Andrews University Press.

MacDonald, B. 2001. Relation between paleoclimate and the settlement of southern Jordan during the Nabataean, Roman and Byzantine periods. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 7, ed. A. Hadidi, 373–78. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Mansoor, N. 1999. Strike-slip to dip-slip strain transfer in an actively subsiding pullapart basin along the Dead Sea Transform, Aqaba, Jordan. American Association of Petroleum Geologists 83:1891.

Margane, A., M. Hobler, M. Almomani, and A. Subah. 2002. Contributions to the hydrogeology of northern and central Jordan. Stuttgart: E. Schweizerbart'sche.

Mattingly, G. L. 1997. A new agenda for research on ancient Moab. Biblical Archaeologist 60/4:214–21

Mattingly, G. L. 1990. Settlement on Jordan's Karak Plateau from Iron Age IIC through the Early Roman Period. ARAM 2:309–35.

Mattingly, G. L., J. H. Pace, R. A Stephenson, and E. P. Wagnon. 1998. The water catchment system of Nakhl, Jordan. Annual of the Department of Antiquities 42:331–39.

McGovern, P. 1987. Central Transjordan in the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages: An alternative hypothesis of socio-economic transformation and collapse. In Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan, vol. 3, ed.A. Hadidi, 267–74. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Netser, M. 1998. Population growth and decline in the northern part of Eretz-Israel during the historical period as related to climate changes. In Water, environment and society in times of climatic change, ed. A. S. Issar and N. Brown, 129–45). Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.

Niemi, T. M., and A. M. Smith II. 1999. Initial results of the southeastern Wadi Araba, Jordan geoarchaeological study: Implications for shifts in late Quaternary aridity. Geoarchaeology: An International Journal 14:791–820.

Nissenbaum, A. 1994. Sodom, Gomorrah and the other lost cities of the plain:A climatic perspective. Climatic Change 26:435–46.

Oleson, J. P. 1991. Aqueducts, cisterns and the strategy of water supply at Nabataean and Roman Auara (Jordan). In Future currents in aqueduct studies, ed. A. T. Hodge, 45–62. Leeds: Francis Cairns.

Palumbo, G., ed. 1994. JADIS: The Jordan Antiquities Database and Information System. Amman: Department of Antiquities of Jordan and American Center of Oriental Research.

Raikes, R. L. 1985. The climate and hydrological background to the post glacial introduction of farming in the Middle East and its subsequent spread, with examples from Jordan. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 2, ed.A. Hadidi, 267–72. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Rosen, A. M. 1986. Environmental change and settlement at Tel Lachish, Israel. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 263:55–60.

Rosen, A. M. 1998. Early to mid-Holocene environmental changes and their impact on human communities in southeastern Anatolia. In Water, environment and society in times of climatic change, ed. A. S. Issar and N. Brown, 215–40. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.

Salameh, H. R. 1997. Geomorphology of the eastern coast of the Dead Sea, Jordan. GeoJournal 41:255–66.

Shehadeh, N. 1984. The climate of Jordan in the past and present. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 2, ed. A. Hadidi, 26–35. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Sneh, A. 1996. The Dead Sea Rift: lateral displacement and downfaulting phases. Tectonophysics 263:277–92.

Van Zeist, W. 1985. Past and present environments of the Jordan Valley. In Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan, vol. 2, ed.A. Hadidi, 199–204. Amman: Department of Antiquities.

Wilkinson, T. J. 2003. Archaeological landscapes of the Near East. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

  • Download PDF