Exposes Sunken Landmass in Persian Gulf

Fertile landmass the size of Great Britain may have been home to first humans exiting Africa, as well as Neanderthals, according to revisionist science. Map credit: Current Anthropology.
Article: New Light on Human Prehistory in the Arabo-Persian Gulf Oasis
By Jeffrey I. Rose
Current Anthropology, 51:849–883, December 2010
Abstract
The
emerging picture of prehistoric Arabia suggests that early modern
humans were able to survive periodic hyperarid oscillations by
contracting into environmental refugia around the coastal margins of the
peninsula. This paper reviews new paleoenvironmental, archaeological,
and genetic evidence from the Arabian Peninsula and southern Iran to
explore the possibility of a demographic refugium dubbed the “Gulf
Oasis,” which is posited to have been a vitally significant zone for
populations residing in southwest Asia during the Late Pleistocene and
Early Holocene. These data are used to assess the role of this large
oasis, which, before being submerged beneath the waters of the Indian
Ocean, was well watered by the Tigris, Euphrates, Karun, and Wadi Batin
rivers as well as subterranean aquifers flowing beneath the Arabian
subcontinent. Inverse to the amount of annual precipitation falling
across the interior, reduced sea levels periodically exposed large
portions of the Arabo-Persian Gulf, equal at times to the size of Great
Britain. Therefore, when the hinterlands were desiccated, populations
could have contracted into the Gulf Oasis to exploit its freshwater
springs and rivers. This dynamic relationship between environmental
amelioration/desiccation and marine transgression/regression is thought
to have driven demographic exchange into and out of this zone over the
course of the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene, as well as having
played an important role in shaping the cultural evolution of local
human populations during that interval.
Purchase article.
Read free report in Live Science.
Comments