Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T02:45:30.563Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fluvial environmental contexts for archaeological sites in the Upper Khabur basin (northeastern Syria)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Katleen Deckers*
Affiliation:
University of Tübingen, Ältere Urgeschichte und Quartärökologie, Schloß Hohentübingen, 72070 Tübingen, Germany
Simone Riehl
Affiliation:
University of Tübingen, Ältere Urgeschichte und Quartärökologie, Schloß Hohentübingen, 72070 Tübingen, Germany
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail addresses:[email protected] (K. Deckers), [email protected] (S. Riehl).

Abstract

Today the eastern tributaries of the Upper Khabur run dry during the summer and the landscape is devoid of trees. This picture is misleading when we try to understand archaeological sites within their former environmental context. Interdisciplinary geomorphological, archaeobotanical and ostracod research on a sequence from the Wadi Jaghjagh indicates that relatively stable, perennial flow velocities occurred during the mid 4th to mid-3rd millennium BC. Evidence was found for a gallery forest and swamp belt along the Jaghjagh during the mid-4th millennium BC. Oak park woodland was present within the region in the 3rd millennium BC and probably up to at least the 3rd century AD. Shortly after 2500 BC, Jaghjagh stream velocities probably decreased or the stream bed had changed its location. Later deposits, possibly dating to the 5th century BC, indicate similar, rather stable flow of the Jaghjagh. More recently however, about ca. AD 900 or afterwards, a flashflood-like regime occurred, which may relate to deforestation. The Wadi Khanzir sediment archives reflect the flashy intermittent regime of this stream, like it still is today, with flashflood evidence dating to the first half of the Holocene and probably dating to approximately AD 400 or later. Along the Jarrah, topsoil was eroded and redeposited by the wadi sometime between 1300 and 600 BC. This may have been caused by the intensive resettlement program of this region around 800 BC. Between about 600 and 300 BC 1.5 m of clay was deposited on the plain.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Altınsaçlı, S., and Griffiths, H.I. A review of the occurrence and distribution of the recent non-marine Ostracoda (Crustacea) of Turkey. Zoology in the Middle East 27, (2002). 6176.Google Scholar
Bar-Matthews, M., and Kaufman, A. Middle to Late Holocene (6,500 yr. period) paleoclimate in the Eastern Mediterranean region from stable isotopic composition of speleothems from Soreq Cave, Israel. Issar, A.S., and Brown, N. Water, Environment and Society in Times of Climatic Change. (1998). Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht. 203214.Google Scholar
Besonen, M., Cremaschi, M., (2002). Geomorphological field survey report. Tell Leilan, June 2002. (http://research.yale.edu/leilan/geomorph/index.html).Google Scholar
Cole, S.W., and Gasche, H. Second- and first millennium BC rivers in northern Mesopotamia. Gasche, H., and Tanret, M. Changing Watercourses in Babylonia. Towards A Reconstruction of the Ancient Environment in Lower Mesopotamia. Mesopotamian History and Environment. Series II. Memoirs vol. V, (1998). University of Ghent, Ghent. 164.Google Scholar
Courty, M.A. Le cadre paléogéographie des occupations humaines dans le Bassin du Haut-Khabur (Syrie du Nord-Est). Premier résultats. Paléorient 20.1, (1994). 2155.Google Scholar
Cöyünç, N., and Hütteroth, W.-D. Land an der Grenze: osmanische Verwaltung im heutigen türkisch-syrisch-irakischen Grenzgebiet im 16. (1997). Jahrhundert, Eren, Istanbul.Google Scholar
Deckers, K. Anthracological research at the archaeological site of Emar on the Middle Euphrates, Syria. Paléorient 32.2, (2005). 152166.Google Scholar
Deckers, K., and Riehl, S. The development of economy and environment from the Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age in northern Syria and the Levant. A case-study from the Upper Khabur region. Antiquity 78.302, (2004). (project gallery) Google Scholar
Deckers, K., Sanderson, D.C.W., and Spencer, J.Q.C. Thermoluminescence screening of non-diagnostic sherds from stream sediments to obtain a preliminary alluvial chronology: an example from Cyprus. Geoarchaeology. An International Journal 20.1, (2005). 6777.Google Scholar
Dillemann, L., (1962). Haute Mésopotamie orientale et pays adjacents: contribution à la géographie historique de la région. du Ve avant l'ère chrètienne au Vie de cette ère, Guether, Paris.Google Scholar
Ergenzinger, P., and Kühne, H. Ein regionales Bewässerungssystem am Habur. Kühne, H. Die rezente Umwelt von Tall Seh Hamad und Daten zur Umweltrekonstruktion der Assyrischen Stadt Dur-Katlimu. (1991). Dietrich Reimer Verlag, Berlin. 163190.Google Scholar
French, C. Geoarchaeology in Action. Studies in Soil Micromorphology and Landscape Evolution. (2003). Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Griffiths, H.I., and Holmes, J.A. Non-marine ostracods and Quaternary palaeoenvironments. Quaternary Research Association Technical Guide vol. 8, (2000). QRA, London.Google Scholar
Hartmann, G. Ostracoda. Klassen und Ordnungen des Tierreichs vol. 5, (1989). Gustav Fischer, Jena.Google Scholar
Heller, J., Sivan, N., and Motro, U. Systematics, distribution and hybridization of Melanopsis from the Jordan Valley (Gastropoda: Prosobranchia). Journal of Conchology 36.5, (1999). 4981.Google Scholar
Kolars, J.F., and Mitchell, W.A. The Euphrates River and the Southeast Anatolia Development Project. (1991). Southern Illinois University Press, Illinois.Google Scholar
Le Strange, G. (Ed. and translated), (1895). Description of Mesopotamia and Baghdad: written about the year 900 A.D. by Ibn Serapion. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, (January and April 1895).Google Scholar
Lightfoot, C. Facts and fiction: the third siege of Nisibis (A.D. 350). Historia 37, (1988). 105125.Google Scholar
Lyonnet, B. Settlement pattern in the Upper Khabur (N.E. Syria) from the Achaemenids to the Abbasid Period: methods and preliminary results from a survey. Bartl, K., and Hauser, S.R. Continuity and Change in Northern Mesopotamia from the Hellenistic to the Early Islamic Period. Berliner Beiträge zum Vorderen Orient vol. 17, (1996). Dietrich Reimer Verlag, Berlin. 349354.Google Scholar
Lyonnet, B. Questions sur l'origine des porteurs de pots en Haute-Mésopotamie, du VIe au milieu du IIe millénaire. Barrelet, M.T., and Charpin, D. Recueil d'études à la mémoire de Marie-Térèse Barrelet. Florilegium marianum vol. 3, (1997). SEPOA, Paris. 133144.Google Scholar
Lyonnet, B. La prospection archéologique de la partie occidentale du Haut-Khabur (Syrie du nord-est): Méthodes, résultats et questions autour de l'occupation aux IIIe et Iie millénaires av. n. E. Durand, J.M. Mari et les hourites. Amurru vol. 1, (1998). ERC, Paris. 363376.Google Scholar
Lyonnet, B. Prospection archéologique Haut-Khabur Occidental (Syrie du N.E.) vol. 1, (2000). Institut Français d'Archéologie du Proche-Orient, Beyrouth.Google Scholar
Martens, K., and Ortal, R. Diversity and zoogeography of inland-water Ostracoda (Crustacea) in Israel (Levant). Israel Journal of Zoology 45, (1999). 159173.Google Scholar
Meijer, D.J.W. A Survey in Northeastern Syria. (1986). Nederlands Historisch-Archeologisch Instituut, Istanbul.Google Scholar
Meijer, T., and Preece, R.C. A review of the occurrence of Corbicula in the Pleistocene of North-West Europe. Geologie en Mijnbouw 79.2/3, (2000). 241255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meisch, C. Freshwater Ostracoda of Western and Central Europe. (2000). Spektrum Akademischer Verlag, Berlin.Google Scholar
Moore, A.M.T., Hillman, G.C., and Legge, A.J. Village on the Euphrates. From Foraging to Farming at Abu Hureyra. (2000). Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Page, S. A stela of Adad-Nirari III and Nergal Ere from Tell al-Rimah. Iraq 30, (1968). 147 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rösner, U. Zur quartären Landschaftsentwicklung in den Trockengebieten Syriens. Relief, Boden, Paläoklima vol. 10, (1995). Gebrüder Borntraeger, Berlin.Google Scholar
van Morkhoven, F.P.C.M. Post-Palaeozoic Ostracoda. Their Morphology, Taxonomy, and Economic Use. 2 vols. (1963). Elsevier, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Wäfler, M. The Excavations at Tell Hamidi. Eichler, S., and Wäfler, M. Tall al-Hamidiya 2. Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis vol. 6, (1990). Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht Göttingen, Freiburg. 219228.Google Scholar
Wäfler, M. Tall al-Hamidiya 4. Vorbericht 1988–2001. Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis vol. 21, (2001). Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht Göttingen, Freiburg.Google Scholar
Wagner, G.A. Altersbestimmung von junge Gesteinen und Artefakten. (1995). Ferdinand Enke Verlag, Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Wick, L., Lemcke, G., and Sturm, M. Evidence of lateglacial and holocene climatic change and human impact in eastern anatolia: high-resolution pollen, charcoal, isotopic and geochemical records from the laminated sediments of Lake Van, Turkey. Holocene 13.5, (2003). 665675.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J. Soil development and early land use in the Jazira region, Upper Mesopotamia. World Archaeology 22.1, (1990). 87103.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J. Holocene Valley Fills of Southern Turkey and Northwestern Syria: recent geoarchaeological contributions. Quaternary Science Reviews (1999). 555571.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J., (2000a). Remote Sensing and Geographical Information Systems. (1999–2000). Annual Report. (http://www-oi.uchicago.edu/OI/AR/99-00/99-00_Jazira.html).Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J. Archaeological survey of the Tell Beydar Region, Syria, 1997: a preliminary report. Van Lerberghe, K., and Voet, G. Tell Beydar Environmental and Technical Studies. Subartu vol. 6, (2000). Brepolis, Turnhout. 137.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J. Physical and cultural landscapes of the Hamoukar area. Akkadica 123, (2002). 89103.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J., and Barbanes, E. Settlement patterns in the Syrian Jazira during the Iron Age. Bunnens, G. Essays on Syria in the Iron Age. Ancient Near Eastern Studies. Supplement vol. 7, (2000). Peeters, Leuven. 397422.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J., and Tucker, D.J. Settlement Development in the North Jazira, Iraq. A Study of the Archaeological Landscape. (1995). Aris Phillips, Warminster.Google Scholar