Abrupt climate change and its influences on hominin evolution during the early Pleistocene in the Turkana Basin, Kenya

2020 ◽  
Vol 245 ◽  
pp. 106531
Author(s):  
Rachel L. Lupien ◽  
James M. Russell ◽  
Matt Grove ◽  
Catherine C. Beck ◽  
Craig S. Feibel ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Bernhard Weninger ◽  
Lee Clare

Recent advances in palaeoclimatological and meteorological research, combined with new radiocarbon data from western Anatolia and southeast Europe, lead us to formulate a new hypothesis for the temporal and spatial dispersal of Neolithic lifeways from their core areas of genesis. The new hypothesis, which we term the Abrupt Climate Change (ACC) Neolithization Model, incorporates a number of insights from modern vulnerability theory. We focus here on the Late Neolithic (Anatolian terminology), which is followed in the Balkans by the Early Neolithic (European terminology). From high-resolution 14C-case studies, we infer an initial (very rapid) west-directed movement of early farming communities out of the Central Anatolian Plateau towards the Turkish Aegean littoral. This move is exactly in phase (decadal scale) with the onset of ACC conditions (~6600 cal BC). Upon reaching the Aegean coastline, Neolithic dispersal comes to a halt. It is not until some 500 years later—that is, at the close of cumulative ACC and 8.2 ka cal BP Hudson Bay cold conditions—that there occurs a second abrupt movement of farming communities into Southeast Europe, as far as the Pannonian Basin. The spread of early farming from Anatolia into eastern Central Europe is best explained as Neolithic communities’ mitigation of biophysical and social vulnerability to natural (climate-induced) hazards.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Bathiany ◽  
M. Scheffer ◽  
E. H. van Nes ◽  
M. S. Williamson ◽  
T. M. Lenton

2001 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 535-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine Mc Intyre ◽  
Margaret L. Delaney ◽  
A. Christina Ravelo

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