The paleoenvironment and depositional context of the Sumerian site of Abu Tbeirah (Nasiriyah, southern Mesopotamia, Iraq)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2022
abstract:
The Sumerian culture flourished within the Tigris and Euphrates rivers floodplains and along their deltaic systems, which ca. 6000 yr were
located ~250-260 km inland from the present Persian Gulf. Here, large floodplains and marshes were crossed by an intricate network of
channels where several human settlements developed. In this paper, we describe in detail the paleoenvironmental context where the site of
Abu Tbeirah (third millennium BC) developed, near the Sumerian capital of Ur. Our interdisciplinary approach, based on remote sensing
and the geomorphological study of the area, as well as on sedimentological, paleontological, and paleobotanical analyses of trenches and
boreholes deposits, reveals that the site developed along a sinuous channel in a floodplain and marshy environment, where several crevasse
splays occurred. This channel was cut off following a flood event. The abandoned portion of the channel was exploited by residents and used
as a small river harbor. Our research contributes to better define how the landscape of the site changed over the course of its history and
how humans exploited water resources of the area during occupation of the site, a process that was pivotal for the development of the
Sumerian culture.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Mesopotamian plain; Sumerian; Holocene; paleoenvironmental reconstruction; Abu Tbeirah site
List of contributors:
Milli, Salvatore; Tentori, Daniel; Forti, Luca; Mazzini, Ilaria
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