Editorial Introduction
Catastrophic earthquakes, explosive volcanic eruptions, and devastating storms and floods are intimately bound up within the history and mythology of the Mediterranean world. It is a key region for the study of natural hazards because it offers unrivalled access to long records of hazard occurrence and impact through documentary, archaeological and geological archives. Early texts and archaeological data have provided unique insights into the nature and impact of past eruptions, earthquakes, tsunamis, and other hazards. Notable events were carefully documented in Antiquity and the archaeological record provides insights into the impact of catastrophic events on past human societies. The eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79, for example, was famously documented by Pliny the Younger, and the excavations at Pompeii have provided extraordinarily rich insights into the dynamics and impacts of tephra falls and pyroclastic flows. The significance of environmental hazards in the demise of civilizations such as Minoan Crete (tsunami) and the Early Bronze Age in the Near East (drought) has been vigorously debated for decades. While such events have undoubtedly threatened people in the region since prehistoric times, the actual threat to human society has increased dramatically in the historical and modern periods as urban environments and their populations have rapidly expanded. This part of the volume analyses hazards associated with both endogenic and exogenic Earth processes and the interactions between them. It includes volcanic processes, crustal instability, tsunamis, fluvial floods, extreme weather phenomena, and wildfires. Each chapter explores the basic controls and the geography of a particular hazard and related processes, and, over a range of timescales, magnitude and frequency relationships and the nature of the threat to human society. High-magnitude events are a fundamental part of the physical geography of the Mediterranean and play a key role in long-term landscape evolution and ecosystem change. Even though the processes associated with each hazard typically take place over very short timescales, they can set in motion long-term adjustments to geomorphological and ecosystem processes. Tephra falls can change soil properties and vegetation communities, for example, and earthquakes may trigger base-level change and landslips in river basins that enhance fluvial sediment yields for many centuries.