Abstract

ABSTRACTThis study presents a meta‐analysis of radiocarbon ages for the environs of Göbekli Tepe – one of the oldest monumental structures worldwide – using cumulative probability functions to diachronically assess phases of geomorphodynamic activity as controlled by natural or anthropogenic drivers. We employ sediment cascades as a heuristic framework to study the complex responses of the geomorphological system to various triggers at local to supra‐regional scales. Possible triggers include climatic variability as documented by supra‐regional hydroclimatic proxy data, regional demographic trends, and local to regional socioeconomic developments such as the emergence of sedentism or the introduction and dispersal of livestock herding. Our results show that phases of intensified geomorphodynamic activity occurred between ca. 7.4–7.0 and 5.8–3.3 ka BP. These phases roughly coincide with phases of population growth in southern Turkey and climatic variations in Turkey and the Levant. The phase between ca. 5.8–3.3 ka BP also corresponds to the time when organized agriculture and the seeder plough were introduced. Also, the identified phases are in agreement with the general trend of varying geomorphodynamic activity in the Eastern Mediterranean as driven by human impact and climatic change. However, neither the Younger Dryas–Holocene transition nor the development of herding during the Pre‐Pottery Neolithic left a clear signature. We demonstrate how the different depositional environments in the studied landscape compartments vary with respect to their spatiotemporal coverage and discuss challenges when trying to understand processes that once shaped landscapes of past societies. © 2020 The Authors. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Highlights

  • Sediment cascades are a characterizing feature of geomorphological systems, illustrating the complex interplay between erosion, transport, and accumulation (Bracken et al, 2015)

  • The environs of Göbekli Tepe provide a unique opportunity to evaluate phases of varying geomorphodynamic activity driven by climatic change and human impact based on the theoretical framework of complex sediment cascades

  • The presented cumulative probability function of 14C dates from sediment sequences obtained from the environs of Göbekli Tepe is in good agreement with the general trend of increased sediment dynamics in the Eastern Mediterranean

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Summary

Introduction

Sediment cascades are a characterizing feature of geomorphological systems, illustrating the complex interplay between erosion, transport, and accumulation (Bracken et al, 2015). Such systems comprise a set of interlinked subsystems at various scales and of varying complexity, forming a nested hierarchy (Chorley and Kennedy, 1971; Harvey, 2002). External forces controlling such systems include climatic variability, (short-term) environmental changes, and human impact. The environs of Göbekli Tepe provide a unique opportunity to evaluate phases of varying geomorphodynamic activity driven by climatic change and human impact based on the theoretical framework of complex sediment cascades

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