2019
DOI: 10.3390/geosciences9040190
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Character, Rates, and Environmental Significance of Holocene Dust Accumulation in Archaeological Hilltop Ruins in the Southern Levant

Abstract: Loess accumulated in the Negev desert during the Pleistocene and primary and secondary loess remains cover large parts of the landscape. Holocene loess deposits are however absent. This could be due low accumulation rates, lack of preservation, and higher erosion rates in comparison to the Pleistocene. This study hypothesized that archaeological ruins preserve Holocene dust. We studied soils developed on archaeological hilltop ruins in the Negev and the Petra region and compared them with local soils, paleosol… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(49 citation statements)
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References 88 publications
(130 reference statements)
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“…Apart from these differences, the archaeological soils of the various structures are strikingly similar. Although higher silt contents are evident in the Northern Negev, all profiles are dominated by calcareous silt, most likely of aeolian origin [19]. This is supported by the characteristics of current dust samples deposited with precipitation in the Petra region, which consist of calcareous silt loam.…”
Section: Petra Regionmentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…Apart from these differences, the archaeological soils of the various structures are strikingly similar. Although higher silt contents are evident in the Northern Negev, all profiles are dominated by calcareous silt, most likely of aeolian origin [19]. This is supported by the characteristics of current dust samples deposited with precipitation in the Petra region, which consist of calcareous silt loam.…”
Section: Petra Regionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…The estimated annual sedimentation rates suggest that deposition on the monastery garden was nearly identical to the amounts that could be collected during one year of continuous sampling with the dust collectors on Jabal Haroun. It is slightly higher than sedimentation in the limestone terrace, and about the double of the deposition rate that was calculated for the hilltop ruin of the triclinium on Jabal Farasha [19]. The cistern cleanout spoil is hardly comparable to the other archives and off-scale, while Terrace 3 collected about 3.5 times the amount that was deposited in the adjacent Negev hilltop ruins [19].…”
Section: Sediment Ages and Sedimentation Ratesmentioning
confidence: 71%
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