TY - JOUR
T1 - On the shore of a fluctuating lake
T2 - Environmental evidence from Ohalo II (19,500 B.P.)
AU - Nadel, Dani
AU - Tsatskin, Alexander
AU - Belmaker, Miriam
AU - Boaretto, Elisabetta
AU - Kislev, Mordechai
AU - Mienis, Henk
AU - Rabinovich, Rivka
AU - Simchoni, Orit
AU - Simmons, Tal
AU - Weiss, Ehud
AU - Zohar, Irit
PY - 2004
Y1 - 2004
N2 - The aim of this paper is to provide a high-resolution environmental reconstruction of the Sea of Galilee basin during a very short spell of time at the end of the Upper Pleistocene. We present a multidisciplinary study of sediments and archaeological remains exposed at the submerged and well-preserved Ohalo II prehistoric site. The Ohalo II camp includes in situ brush hut floors, hearths, and other installations, all radiometrically dated to 19,500 B.P. The remains include large quantities of charred material and animal bones. The reconstruction is based on a geoarchaeological study, accompanied by analyses of a wide variety of trees, grasses, mammals, birds, fish, and mollusc remains. The results show that the range of plant and animal species (ca. 240) is not different from that encountered today in the valley and the surrounding slopes. Water level fluctuations were the most dramatic environmental events, probably induced by climatic changes and tectonic activities at the inlet/outlet of the lake.
AB - The aim of this paper is to provide a high-resolution environmental reconstruction of the Sea of Galilee basin during a very short spell of time at the end of the Upper Pleistocene. We present a multidisciplinary study of sediments and archaeological remains exposed at the submerged and well-preserved Ohalo II prehistoric site. The Ohalo II camp includes in situ brush hut floors, hearths, and other installations, all radiometrically dated to 19,500 B.P. The remains include large quantities of charred material and animal bones. The reconstruction is based on a geoarchaeological study, accompanied by analyses of a wide variety of trees, grasses, mammals, birds, fish, and mollusc remains. The results show that the range of plant and animal species (ca. 240) is not different from that encountered today in the valley and the surrounding slopes. Water level fluctuations were the most dramatic environmental events, probably induced by climatic changes and tectonic activities at the inlet/outlet of the lake.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=19944434310&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1560/v3cu-ebr7-ukat-uca6
DO - 10.1560/v3cu-ebr7-ukat-uca6
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AN - SCOPUS:19944434310
SN - 0021-2164
VL - 53
SP - 207
EP - 223
JO - Israel Journal of Earth Sciences
JF - Israel Journal of Earth Sciences
IS - 3-4
ER -