2021
DOI: 10.1002/wcc.741
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Climate change and early urbanism in Southwest Asia: A review

Abstract: During the Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age (c. 6500-4000 BP), the Fertile Crescent in Southwest Asia saw the earliest development of cities anywhere in the world. Climate and environmental factors are generally considered to be significant in these changes because in pre-industrial societies they directly relate to food production and security. The emergence of cities also coincides with a decoupling of settlement and climate trends, suggesting urbanism may have enhanced the adaptive capacity of societi… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 124 publications
(140 reference statements)
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“…Countries whose assessment results are lower than 0.5 are mainly located in Africa and South Asia, such as Kenya, Congo (the), Pakistan, and Afghanistan which are characterized with long‐term tropical climate caused water scarcity and drought and high temperature and rainfall caused low organic matters in soil (Agrawala et al, 2001; Dai, 2011). For Africa, the low food security is also owing to its historical, political, and cultural reasons including political instability and crises, civil conflicts and wars, institutional corruption, misdirected economic policies, and neglect on the farmers (Dodo, 2020; Lawrence et al, 2022).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Countries whose assessment results are lower than 0.5 are mainly located in Africa and South Asia, such as Kenya, Congo (the), Pakistan, and Afghanistan which are characterized with long‐term tropical climate caused water scarcity and drought and high temperature and rainfall caused low organic matters in soil (Agrawala et al, 2001; Dai, 2011). For Africa, the low food security is also owing to its historical, political, and cultural reasons including political instability and crises, civil conflicts and wars, institutional corruption, misdirected economic policies, and neglect on the farmers (Dodo, 2020; Lawrence et al, 2022).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, on the basis of archeological and written prehistoric sources [ 124 , 125 ], the evolution of the first domesticated hairy sheep to the woolly sheep also occurred in the domestication center as late as the late 8th to early 7th millennium, and then migrated westward to the occidental Mediterranean basin during the late Copper Age, and then the Bronze Age to the Iron Age. Driven by the climatic change from the wetter early Holocene to cooler and drier conditions beginning in the 7th millennium [ 123 , 126 , 127 ], the evolution from the hairy to the veritable woolly sheep would have taken many millennia, after a mutation process due to a retro-gene insertion resulted in graduate coat qualities from the hairy wild ancestor to woolly sheep [ 128 ]. This process, thought to have occurred in Mesopotamia during the later Copper Age [ 123 , 129 ], is presumed as the reduction of the hair and Kemp fibers, as the development of the fine under-wool of the winter undercoat did not change seasonally any more, but grew continuously, as well as, finally, the loss of the hair pigmentation [ 129 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Babelon [ 134 ] mentioned that the most frequently represented animal in Carthage steles was the fat-tailed and woolly sheep typical of the Carthage Republic dominating large parts of the western Mediterranean basin, during the 3rd millennium B.P. Carthage was founded by the Canaanite/Phoenician migrated from Canaan in the southern Levant, where pastoral nomadism became the dominant economy, and the fat-tailed sheep became the dominate sheep variety as a response to climate change [ 126 , 135 ]. Unfortunately, the prehistoric written sources of Carthage, which detailed the fat-tailed sheep breeding, as well as the wool sheep production and ancient wool trade in the occidental southern Mediterranean rim, as described in Egyptian and Roman prehistoric sources, were destroyed during the Punic war [ 136 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Focused case studies of urban trajectories differ from heuristic analogs by their greater precision about social and environmental processes, including a more delimited domain and a more explicit problem orientation. Archaeological research by Dan Lawrence and colleagues on trajectories of urbanization and climate change Global Sustainability in Mesopotamia (Lawrence et al, 2021) is a good example of focused case studies relevant to urban sustainability today. Felix Riede's research on the effects of a past volcanic event shows the value of the first level of case-study research on a sustainability-related topic (Riede, 2019).…”
Section: Case Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%