Precise timing of abrupt increase in dust activity in the Middle East coincident with 4.2 ka social change

The extent to which climate change causes significant societal disruption remains controversial. An important example is the decline of the Akkadian Empire in northern Mesopotamia ∼4.2 ka, for which the existence of a coincident climate event is still uncertain. Here we present an Iranian stalagmite...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 116; no. 1; pp. 67 - 72
Main Authors Carolin, Stacy A., Walker, Richard T., Day, Christopher C., Ersek, Vasile, Sloan, R. Alastair, Dee, Michael W., Talebian, Morteza, Henderson, Gideon M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 02.01.2019
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Summary:The extent to which climate change causes significant societal disruption remains controversial. An important example is the decline of the Akkadian Empire in northern Mesopotamia ∼4.2 ka, for which the existence of a coincident climate event is still uncertain. Here we present an Iranian stalagmite record spanning 5.2 ka to 3.7 ka, dated with 25 U/Th ages that provide an average age uncertainty of 31 y (1σ). We find two periods of increased Mg/Ca, beginning abruptly at 4.51 and 4.26 ka, and lasting 110 and 290 y, respectively. Each of these periods coincides with slower vertical stalagmite growth and a gradual increase in stable oxygen isotope ratios. The periods of high Mg/Ca are explained by periods of increased dust flux sourced from the Mesopotamia region, and the abrupt onset of this dustiness indicates threshold behavior in response to aridity. This interpretation is consistent with existing marine and terrestrial records from the broad region, which also suggest that the later, longer event beginning at 4.26 ka is of greater regional extent and/or amplitude. The chronological precision and high resolution of our record indicates that there is no significant difference, at decadal level, between the start date of the second, larger dust event and the timing of North Mesopotamia settlement abandonment, and furthermore reveals striking similarity between the total duration of the second dust event and settlement abandonment. The Iranian record demonstrates this region’s threshold behavior in dust production, and its ability to maintain this climate state for multiple centuries naturally.
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Author contributions: S.A.C., R.T.W., and V.E. designed research; S.A.C., R.T.W., V.E., R.A.S., and M.T. performed research; S.A.C., C.C.D., M.W.D., and G.M.H. analyzed data; and S.A.C., R.T.W., C.C.D., V.E., R.A.S., M.W.D., and G.M.H. wrote the paper.
Edited by Glen M. MacDonald, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, and approved November 16, 2018 (received for review May 10, 2018)
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1808103115