Abstract

Abstract. Systematic archaeological exploration of southern Qatar started in the 1950s. However, detailed local and regional data on climatic fluctuations and landscape changes during the Holocene, pivotal for understanding and reconstructing human–environment interactions, are still lacking. This contribution provides an overview on the variability of geomorphic environments of southern Qatar with a focus on depression landforms, which reveal a rich archaeological heritage ranging from Palaeolithic(?) and Early Neolithic times to the Modern era. Based on a detailed geomorphic mapping campaign, sediment cores and optically stimulated luminescence data, the dynamics of riyad (singular rawdha; shallow, small-scale, sediment-filled karst depressions clustering in the central southern peninsula) and the larger-scale Asaila depression near the western coast are studied in order to put archaeological discoveries into a wider environmental context. Geomorphic mapping of the Asaila basin shows a much greater geomorphic variability than documented in literature so far with relict signs of surface runoff. An 8 m long sediment core taken in the sabkha-type sand flats of the western basin reveals a continuous dominance of aeolian morphodynamics during the early to mid-Holocene. Mounds preserved by evaporite horizons representing capillarites originally grown in the vadose zone are a clear sign of groundwater-level drop after the sea-level highstand ca. 6000–4500 years ago. Deflation followed the lowering of the Stokes surface, leaving mounds where the relict capillarites were able to fixate and preserve the palaeo-surface. Abundant archaeological evidence of Early and Middle Neolithic occupation – the latter with a clear focus inside the central Asaila basin – indicate more favourable living conditions than today. In contrast, the sediment record of the investigated riyad in the south is very shallow, younger and controlled by surface discharge, deflation and the constantly diminishing barchan dune cover in Qatar over the Middle and Late Holocene. The young age of the infill (ca. 1500 to 2000 years) explains the absence of findings older than the Late Islamic period. Indicators of current net deflation may relate to a decrease in surface runoff and sediment supply only in recent decades to centuries. In the future, geophysical prospection of the riyad may help to locate thicker sedimentary archives and the analysis of grain size distribution, micromorphology, phytoliths or even pollen spectra may enhance our understanding of the interplay of regional environmental changes and cultural history.

Highlights

  • Pioneering archaeological surveys and excavations in Qatar started more than 60 years ago (e.g. Glob, 1958; Kapel, 1967; de Cardi, 1978; Tixier, 1980; Inizan, 1988)

  • The Middle Neolithic is often represented by surface finds of tile knives, scrapers, bifacial arrowheads and, in some cases, Ubaid-style pottery (Tixier, 1980; Inizan, 1988; Drechsler, 2014), which implies links with other Ubaid-related sites of the southern Arabian Gulf coast dated to the 6th–5th millennium BCE (Oates, 1978; Uerpmann and Uerpmann, 1996; Kainert and Drechsler, 2014)

  • This paper provides a general overview of the variability of geomorphic environments of southern Qatar over Holocene timescales

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Pioneering archaeological surveys and excavations in Qatar started more than 60 years ago (e.g. Glob, 1958; Kapel, 1967; de Cardi, 1978; Tixier, 1980; Inizan, 1988). The Middle Neolithic is often represented by surface finds of tile knives, scrapers, bifacial arrowheads and, in some cases, Ubaid-style pottery (Tixier, 1980; Inizan, 1988; Drechsler, 2014), which implies links with other Ubaid-related sites of the southern Arabian Gulf coast dated to the 6th–5th millennium BCE (Oates, 1978; Uerpmann and Uerpmann, 1996; Kainert and Drechsler, 2014). The Bronze Age is only sparsely represented in Qatar, most prominently in the form of pottery and a purple-dye industry at Al-Khor north of Doha (Edens, 1999; Carter and Killick, 2010) Such finds are nearly absent in the southern part of the country (Gerber et al, 2014). The nomadic and semi-nomadic Bedouin culture, coexisted and persisted well into the 20th century CE, focussing on the shallow karst depressions of the Qatar peninsula as campsites (McPhillips et al, 2015)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call