2022
DOI: 10.1007/s10814-022-09176-6
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Was There a 3.2 ka Crisis in Europe? A Critical Comparison of Climatic, Environmental, and Archaeological Evidence for Radical Change during the Bronze Age–Iron Age Transition

Abstract: The globalizing connections that defined the European Bronze Age in the second millennium BC either ended or abruptly changed in the decades around 1200 BC. The impact of climate change at 3.2 ka on such social changes has been debated for the eastern Mediterranean. This paper extends this enquiry of shifting human–climate relationships during the later Bronze Age into Europe for the first time. There, climate data indicate that significant shifts occurred in hydroclimate and temperatures in various parts of E… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 161 publications
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“…Interestingly, similar to the other episodes of enhanced erosion identified in the Hashilan Wetland sediment core, this episode is also coeval with a cold and dry climate event known as the 3.2 ka event ( ~3.3 to 2.9 kcal BP) that influenced Late Bronze and Early Iron Age communities in different regions including southwestern Asia (Neumann and Parpola, 1987;Alpert and Neumann, 1989;Shaikh Baikloo Islam, 2021;Vaezi et al, 2022), the eastern Mediterranean (Kaniewski et al, 2019) and western Europe (Molloy, 2022).…”
Section: Sedimentologysupporting
confidence: 61%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Interestingly, similar to the other episodes of enhanced erosion identified in the Hashilan Wetland sediment core, this episode is also coeval with a cold and dry climate event known as the 3.2 ka event ( ~3.3 to 2.9 kcal BP) that influenced Late Bronze and Early Iron Age communities in different regions including southwestern Asia (Neumann and Parpola, 1987;Alpert and Neumann, 1989;Shaikh Baikloo Islam, 2021;Vaezi et al, 2022), the eastern Mediterranean (Kaniewski et al, 2019) and western Europe (Molloy, 2022).…”
Section: Sedimentologysupporting
confidence: 61%
“…A notable drop in MS between 3.3 and 2.9 kcal bp is associated with increased erosion and influx of coarse‐grained sediments with calcite from the catchment into the wetland, which is synchronous with arid conditions identified in a peat core from southeast Iran (Vaezi et al, 2022) and increased aeolian deposition in Lake Neor, northwest Iran (Sharifi et al, 2015). Interestingly, similar to the other episodes of enhanced erosion identified in the Hashilan Wetland sediment core, this episode is also coeval with a cold and dry climate event known as the 3.2 ka event ( ~3.3 to 2.9 kcal bp ) that influenced Late Bronze and Early Iron Age communities in different regions including southwestern Asia (Neumann and Parpola, 1987; Alpert and Neumann, 1989; Shaikh Baikloo Islam, 2021; Vaezi et al, 2022), the eastern Mediterranean (Kaniewski et al, 2019) and western Europe (Molloy, 2022).…”
Section: Results and Interpretationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, conducting further and future cross-regional studies in other Scandinavian coastal regions where comparable studies have yet to be conducted would help to further develop the methodology, and either strengthen or contrast the results from Western Norway. Future work would also benefit from establishing protocols for data retrieval in the field, or the analysis of pertinent archaeological, palaeoecological, or even pathogenic traces, that could indicate the occurrence of large-scale socio-ecological deterioration with resulting demographic declines (Molloy, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By using apogee length as a key dimension of sustainability, we avoid the pitfall of attributing causality to presumed correlations between specific environmental perturbations and hypothesized human responses. In archaeology, the lion's share of such attempts not only place undue stress on available chronological controls, but they also sidestep the growing recognition that how people respond to environmental perturbations is in large part a consequence of organizational effectiveness both prior to and during challenges (e.g., Middleton, 2017;Molloy, 2022). Our focus on sustainability recognizes that perturbations may be environmental, economic, or sociopolitical, and that most frequently these stresses are synergistically intertwined (Fisher and Feinman, 2005;Løvschal, 2022;Silva et al, 2022).…”
Section: Conceptual Framingmentioning
confidence: 99%