2012
DOI: 10.1017/s003382220004724x
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Chronology of the Early Bronze Age in the Southern Levant: New Analysis for a High Chronology

Abstract: ABSTRACT. The chronology of the Early Bronze Age (EBA) in the southern Levant and the synchronization between the sites, considering seriation and radiocarbon dates, have shown large inconsistencies and disagreement. We have assembled 420 14 C dates, most of them previously published and a few provided directly by the excavators. The dates have been re-evaluated on the basis of their archaeological context and using analytical criteria. Bayesian modeling has been applied to the selected dates in relation to th… Show more

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Cited by 161 publications
(76 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
(47 reference statements)
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“…Firstly, the 'standard' chronology of the EBA of the southern Levant has been questioned by a review of the radiometric evidence (Regev et al 2012). The key outcomes relevant to this study are as follows:…”
Section: Comparisons With the Southern Levantmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Firstly, the 'standard' chronology of the EBA of the southern Levant has been questioned by a review of the radiometric evidence (Regev et al 2012). The key outcomes relevant to this study are as follows:…”
Section: Comparisons With the Southern Levantmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The failure of this southern system around the middle of the third millennium BC serves to underline the very particular and contrasting character of the landscape of North Mesopotamia, where the mid third millennium BC was a period of marked settlement expansion. The direct comparison between the southern and northern Fertile Crescent has been facilitated by the publication of new radiometric and palaeoenvironmental frameworks (Bar-Matthews and Ayalon 2011; Regev et al 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the 435 Negev Highland sites were considered exclusively as an EB IV phenomenon based on 436 ceramic correlation to the settled provinces to the north, in contradiction to radiocarbon 437 data obtained from the sites themselves (Fig. 10, (Regev, et al, 2012a, Regev, et al, 2012b, which 449 places the beginning of the EB IV around 2500 BCE, further supports this suggestion by 450 pushing back the date of common EB IV pottery found in the Negev sites (cf. Shahack-451…”
Section: Introduction 50 51mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Many other Syrian sites are abandoned early in Early Bronze IVB, with the final wave of destruction and abandonment coming at the end of Early Bronze IVB, around the end of the 3rd millennium (Porter 2007;Schwartz 2007:52;Ur 2010a:388, 412). A recent proposal to move the horizon earlier by about 3 centuries based on a number of radiocarbon determinations (Regev et al 2012a(Regev et al , 2012b) appears unwarranted by the totality of the evidence (Schwartz et al 2012;Bietak 2013: esp. 94).…”
Section: S4mentioning
confidence: 99%