Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-18T21:41:50.103Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

17 - The influence of water on Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age settlement patterns in the southern Levant

from Part IV - Human settlement, climate change, hydrology and water management

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2011

Jaimie Lovell
Affiliation:
Council for British Research in the Levant (CBRL)
Andrew Bradley
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Steven Mithen
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Emily Black
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Get access

Summary

ABSTRACT

While the environment cannot be considered a ‘deus ex machina’ for any event in human history, it is becoming increasingly clear to prehistorians that the extraordinary developments in human social complexity documented in the archaeological record since the beginnings of sedentism in the Late Pleistocene occurred in concert with profound climatic and environmental changes. This chapter investigates settlement patterns in Jordan, Palestine and Israel during a key archaeological transition in the southern Levant, the Chalcolithic to the Early Bronze Age (EBA). We summarise regional settlement location in relation to potential forcing factors which themselves may be indicative of societal and climatic change, such as springs, wadis, routes and permanent sites. We make a geospatial analysis and calculate ‘cost distance’ values between these forcing factors and the settlement data. We then analyse how these cost distance values change over time in different altitudinal belts. We find that the cost distance patterns varied at different altitudes during the transition period. In some altitudinal belts in the EBI and EBA, springs appear to determine settlement location, showing the importance of climate, while in other altitudinal belts formalisation of settlements around the longer-standing sites and routes suggest that socio-political changes may have been more influential in the EBA. The value of this method and the implications of our results are then discussed in the light of existing and emerging research on the transition from the ‘prehistoric’ to the ‘historic’ period.

Type
Chapter
Information
Water, Life and Civilisation
Climate, Environment and Society in the Jordan Valley
, pp. 269 - 288
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abu Dayyah, A. S., Greene, J. A., Hassan, I. H. and Suleiman, E. (1991) Archaeological Survey of Greater Amman, Phase 1: Final Report. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 35: 361–414.Google Scholar
Al-Shorman, A. A. (2002) Archaeological site distribution in Jordan since the Palaeolithic and the role of climate change. Adumantu 5: 7–26.Google Scholar
Anfinset, N., Taha, H., al-Zawahra, M. and Yasine, J. (in press) Societies in transition: contextualising Tell el-Mafjar, Jericho. In Culture, Chronology and the Chalcolithic: Theory and Transition, ed. Lovell, J. L. and Rowan, Y. M.. Oxford: Oxbow.
Avni, G. (1992) Map of Har Saggi Northeast (225). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Banning, E. B. (1997) Recovery from landslides in Wadi Ziqlab. American Journal of Archaeology 101: 504.Google Scholar
Baumgartel, Y. (2004) Map of Shivta (166). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Beit-Arieh, I. (2003) Map of Tel Malhata (144) Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Berman, A. and Barda, L. (2005) Map of Nizzanim (West and East) (87 and 88). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Berman, A., Stark, H. and Barda, L. (2004) Map of Ziqim (91)Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Bienert, H.-D. (2004) The underground tunnel system in wadi ash-Shellalah, Northern Jordan. In Men of Dikes and Canals: The Archaeology of Water in the Middle East, ed. Bienert, H.-D., Gebel, H. G. K. and Neef, R.. Rahden, Westphalia: Verlag Marie Leidorf.Google Scholar
Bourke, S. (2008) The Chalcolithic. In Jordan: An Archaeological Reader, ed. Adams, R.. London: Equinox.Google Scholar
Bourke, S., Lovell, J. L., Sparks, R. T.et al. (2000) A second and third season of renewed excavation by the University of Sydney at Tulaylat al-Ghassul (1995–1997). Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 44: 37–89.Google Scholar
Bourke, S., Sparks, R. T., Mclaren, P. B.et al. (2003) Preliminary report on the University of Sydney's eighteenth and nineteenth seasons of excavations at Pella (Tabaqat Fahl) in 1996/7. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 47: 335–388.Google Scholar
Braun, E. (1996) Cultural diversity and change in the Early Bronze I of Israel and Jordan. Unpublished PhD thesis: Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Braun, E. (2010) The transition from Chalcolithic to EB I in the southern Levant, a ‘lost horizon’ slowly revealed. In Culture, Chronology and the Chalcolithic: Theory and Transition, ed. Lovell, J. L. and Rowan, Y. M.. Oxford: Oxbow pp. 160–177.Google Scholar
Brooks, N. (2006) Cultural responses to aridity in the middle Holocene and increased social complexity. Quaternary International 151: 29–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruins, H. J. (1994) Comparative chronology of climate and human history in the southern Levant from the late Chalcolithic to the Early Arab Period. In Late Quaternary Chronology and Palaeoclimates of the Eastern Mediterranean, ed. Bar-Yosef, O. and Kra, R. S.. Tucson: Radiocarbon pp. 301–314.Google Scholar
Burton, M. and Levy, T. E. (in press) The end of the Chalcolithic period (4500–3600 BCE) in the northern Negev desert, Israel. In Culture, Chronology and the Chalcolithic: Theory and Transition, ed. Lovell, J. L. and Rowan, Y. M.. Oxford: Oxbow.
Chesson, M. and Philip, G. (2003) Tales of the city? ‘Urbanism’ in the early Bronze Age Levant from Mediterranean and Levantine perspectives. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 16/1: 3–16.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. (1981) Map of Sede Boqer-East (168) 13–03. Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. (1985) Map of Sede Boqer-west (167) 12–03. Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Dagan, Y. (1992) Map of Lakhish (98). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Miroschedji, P. (2002) The socio-political dynamics of the Egyptian–Canaanite interaction in the Early Bronze Age. In Egypt and the Levant: Interrelations from the 4th through the Early 3rd Millennium B.C.E., ed. Brink, E. C. M. and Levy, T. E.. London: Leicester University Press.Google Scholar
Vaux, R. (1971) Palestine in the Early Bronze Age. In Early History of the Middle East 3rd Edition, ed. Edwards, I. E. S., Gadd, J. and Hammond, N. G. L.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press pp. 208–237.Google Scholar
Donahue, J. (1981) Geologic investigations at Early Bronze sites. In The Southeastern Dead Sea Plain Expedition: An Interim Report of the 1977 Season, ed. Rast, W. E. and Schaub, R. T.. Boston, MA: American Schools of Oriental Research pp. 137–154.Google Scholar
Donahue, J. (2003) Geology and geomorphology. In Bab edh-Dhra: Excavations at the Town Site (1975–81), ed. Rast, W. E. and Shaub, R. T.. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns pp. 18–55.Google Scholar
Esse, D. L. (1991) Subsistence, Trade, and Social Change in Early Bronze Age Palestine. Chicago, IL: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Falconer, S. (1987) Heartland of villages: reconsidering early urbanism in the southern Levant. Unpublished PhD thesis: University of Arizona.Google Scholar
Finkelstein, I. and Gophna, R. (1993) Settlement, demographic and economic patterns in the highlands of Palestine in the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Periods and the beginning of urbanism. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 289: 1–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Finkelstein, I., Lederman, Z., Bunimovitz, S. and Barkai, R. (1997) Highlands of Many Cultures. Tel Aviv: Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv University Publications.Google Scholar
Finkelstein, I. and Magen, Y., eds. (1993) Archaeological Survey of the Hill Country of Benjamin. Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Fletcher, R. (2008) Some spatial analyses of Chalcolithic settlement in Southern Israel. Journal of Archaeological Science 35: 2048–2058.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, R. and Winter, R. (2008) Prospects and problems in applying GIS to the study of the Chalcolithic archaeology in southern Israel. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 352: 1–27.Google Scholar
Frankel, R., Gertov, N., Aviam, M. and Degani, A. (2001) Settlement Dynamics and Regional Diversity in Ancient Upper Galilee. Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frankel, R. and Getzov, N. (1997) Map of Akhziv (1); Map of Hanita (2). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Frumkin, A., Magaritz, M., Carmi, I. and Zak, I. (1991) The Holocene climatic record of the salt caves of Mount Sedom. The Holocene 1: 191–200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frumkin, A., Magaritz, M., Carmi, I. and Zak, I. (1997) The Holocene climatic record of the Salt Caves of Mount Sedom. The Holocene 1: 191–200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frumkin, A., Kadan, G., Enzel, Y. and Eyal, Y. (2001) Radiocarbon chronology of the Holocene Dead Sea: attempting a regional correlation. Radiocarbon 43: 1179–1189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gal, Z. (1991) Map of Gazit (46). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Gal, Z. (1998) Map of Har Tavor (41); Map of ‘En Dor (45). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Gazit, D. (1996) Map of Urim (125). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Gibson, S., Ibbs, B. and Kloner, A. (1991) The Sataf Project of Landscape Archaeology in the Judean Hills: a preliminary report on four seasons of excavation and survey. Levant 23: 29–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilead, I. (1995) Grar: A Chalcolithic Site in the Northern Neg. Tel Aviv: Ben GurionUniversity of the Negev Press.Google Scholar
Gophna, R. and Ayalon, A. (1998) Map of Herziliyya (69). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Gophna, R. and Beit-Arieh, I. (1997) Map of Lod (80). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Gophna, R. and Portugali, J. (1988) Settlement and demographic processes in Israel's coastal plain from the Chalcolithic to the Middle Bronze Age. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 269: 11–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gophna, R. and Tsuk, T. (2005) Chalcolithic settlements in the Western Samaria foothills. Tel Aviv 32/1: 3–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gordon, R. L. and Villiers, L. E. (1983) Tulul edh-Dhahab and its environs. Survey of 1980 and 1982, a preliminary report. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 27: 285–289.Google Scholar
Grigson, C. (1995) Plough and pasture in the early economy of the southern Levant. In Archaeology of Society in the Holy Land, ed. Levy, T. E.. London: Leicester University Press pp. 245–268.Google Scholar
Haiman, M. (1986) Map of Har Hamran – Southwest (198). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Haiman, M. (1991) Map of Mizpé Ramon – Southwest (200). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Haiman, M. (1993) Map of Har Hamran – Southeast (199). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Haiman, M. (1999) Map of Har Ramon (203). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Hanbury-Tenison, J. (1986) The Late Chalcolithic to Early Bronze I Transition in Palestine and Transjordan. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 311.Google Scholar
Hanbury-Tenison, J. (1987) Jerash region survey, 1984. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 31: 129–157.Google Scholar
Helms, S. (1982) Paleo-bedouin and Transmigrant Urbanism. In Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan I, ed. Hadidi, A.. Amman: Department of Antiquities pp. 97–113.Google Scholar
Hirschfeld, Y. (1985) Map of Herodium (108/2). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Hourani, F. and County, M. -A. (1997) L'évolution climatique de 10 500 à 5500 B.P. dans la vallée du Jourdain. Paleorient 23: 95–105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ibach, R. (1987) Hesban 5: Archaeological Survey of the Hesban Region: Catalog of Sites and Characterization of Periods. Berrien Springs: Andrews University Press.Google Scholar
Ibrahim, M., Sauer, J. A. and Yassine, K. (1976) The East Jordan Valley Survey. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 222: 41–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarvis, A., Reuter, H. I., Nelson, A. and Guevara, E. (2008). http://srtm.csi.cgiar.org.
Joffe, A. H. (2003) Slouching toward Beersheva: Chalcolithic mortuary practices in local and regional context. In The Near East in The Southwest, Essays in Honor of William G. Dever, ed. Alpert-Nakhai, B.. Oxford: Oxbow pp. 45–67.Google Scholar
Joffe, A. H. (1993) Settlement and Society in the Early Bronze Age I and II, Southern Levant: Complementarity and Contradiction in a Small-Scale Complex Society. Sheffield: Sheffield University Press.Google Scholar
Kenyon, K. M. (1960) Excavations at Jericho, 1957–58. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 92: 88–108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerner, S. (1997) Status, perspectives and future goals in Jordanian Chalcolithic research. In The Prehistory of Jordan II, Perspectives from 1997, ed. Gebel, H. G. K., Kafafai, Z. and Rollefson, G.. Berlin: ex Oriente pp. 465–474.Google Scholar
Kloner, A. (2001) Survey of Jerusalem (The Northeastern Sector). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Lender, Y. (1990) Map of Har Nafha (196). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Leonard, A. (1992) The Jordan Valley Survey, 1953: Some Unpublished Soundings Conducted by James Mellaart. Boston, MA: Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research.Google Scholar
Levy, T. E. (1995) Cult, metallurgy and rank societies – Chalcolithic period. In Archaeology of Society in the Holy Land, ed. Levy, T. E.. Leicester: Leicester University Press pp. 226–244.Google Scholar
Lovell, J. L. (2001) The Late Neolithic and Chalcolithic Periods in the Southern Levant: New Data from Teleilat Ghassul, Jordan. Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Lovell, J. L. (2002) Shifting subsistence patterns: some ideas about the end of the Chalcolithic in the southern Levant. Paleorient 28/1: 89–102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovell, J. L. (2008) Horticulture, status and long-range trade in Chalcolithic southern Levant: early connections with Egypt. Proceedings of the International Conference on Origin of the State. Predynastic and Early Dynastic Egypt, ed. Midant-Reynes, B. and Tristant, M. Y.. Toulouse: Peeters Publishers pp. 739–760.Google Scholar
Mabry, J. M. (1989) Investigations at Tell el-Handaquq, Jordan (1987–88). Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 32: 59–95.Google Scholar
Mabry, J. M., Donaldson, L., Gruspier, K.et al. (1996) Early town development and water management in the Jordan Valley: investigations at Tell el-Handaquq North. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 53: 115–154.Google Scholar
Mabry, J. M. and Palumbo, G. (1988) The 1987 Wadi el Yabis survey. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 32: 275–305.Google Scholar
Mazar, A. and Mullins, R. A. (2007) Excavations at Tel Beth-Shean 1989–1996, Vol. 2. The Middle and Late Bronze Age Strata in Area R Jerusalem. Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society.Google Scholar
Meadows, J. (2005) Early farmers and their environment: archaeobotanical studies of Neolithic and Chalcolithic sites in Jordan. Unpublished PhD thesis: La Trobe University.Google Scholar
Migowski, C., Stein, M., Prasad, S., Negendank, J. F. W. and Agnon, A. (2006) Holocene climate variability and cultural evolution in the Near East from the Dead Sea sedimentary record. Quaternary Research 66: 421–431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milevski, I. I. (2005) Local Exchange in Early Bronze Age Canaan. Unpublished PhD thesis: Tel Aviv University.Google Scholar
Miller, R. (1980) Water use in Syria and Palestine from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. World Archaeology 11/3: 331–341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mittmann, S. (1970) Beiträge zur Siedlungs- und Territorialgeschichte des nördlichen Ostjordanlandes. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.Google Scholar
Ne-eman, Y. (1990) Map of Ma'anit (54). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Ne-eman, Y., Sender, S. and Oren, E. (2000) Map of Mikhmoret (52); Map of Hadera (53). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Ne-eman, Y., Sender, S. and Oren, E. (2005a) Map of Binyamina (48). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Ne-eman, Y., Sender, S. and Oren, E. (2005b) Map of Dor (30). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Neev, D. and Emery, K. O. (1995) The Destruction of Sodom, Gomorrah, and Jericho. New York:Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Olami, Y. and Gal, Z. (2003) Map of Shefar'am (24). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Olami, Y., Ronen, A. and Romano, A. (2003) Map of Haifa – West (22). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Olami, Y., Sender, S. and Oren, E. (2004) Map of Yagur (27). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Ovadia, E. (1992) The domestication of the ass and pack transport by animals: a case of technological change. In Pastoralism in the Levant: Archaeological Materials in Anthropological Perspectives, ed. Bar-Yosef, O. and Khazanov, A.. Madison, WI: Prehistory Press pp. 181–204.Google Scholar
Palumbo, G. (1994) The Jordan Antiquities Database and Information System, A Summary of the Data. Amman: Department of Antiquities.Google Scholar
Palumbo, G., Mabry, J. M. and Kujit, I. (1990) The Wadi el-Yabis Survey: report on the 1989 field season. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 34: 95–118.Google Scholar
Patrich, J. (1994) Map of Deir Mar Saba (109/7). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Philip, G. (2001) The Early Bronze I–III Ages. In The Archaeology of Jordan, ed. MacDonald, B., Adams, R. and Bienkowski, P.. Sheffield: Sheffield University Press pp. 163–232.Google Scholar
Philip, G. (2003) The Early Bronze Age of the southern Levant: a landscape approach. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 16: 103–132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philip, G. (2008) The Early Bronze Age I–III. In Jordan: An Archaeological Reader, ed. Adams, R.. London: Equinox pp. 161–226.Google Scholar
Philip, G. and Baird, D. (1993) Preliminary report on the second (1992) season of excavations at Tell esh-Shuna North. Levant 15: 13–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raban, A. (1999) Map of Mishmar Ha-‘Emeq (32). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Robinson, S. A., Black, S., Sellwood, B. and Valdes, P. J. (2006) A review of palaeoclimates and palaeoenvironments in the Levant and Eastern Mediterranean from 25,000 to 5000 years BP: setting the environmental background for the evolution of human civilisation. Quaternary Science Reviews 25: 1517–1541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rollefson, G. and Wasse, A. (in press) Wissad, a Late Prehistoric necropolis in Jordan's Eastern Badia. In Archaeology in Jordan, ed. Porter, B.. American Journal of Archaeology.
Rosen, A. (1989) Environmental change at the end of the Early Bronze Age Palestine. In L'urbanisation de la Palestine à l'âge du Bronze Ancien, ed. Miroschedji, P.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series pp. 247–256.Google Scholar
Rosen, S. (1994) Map of Makhtesh Ramon (204). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Savage, S. H. (2002) http://archaeology.asu.edu/jordan/Reproject.html.
Stark, H., Barda, L. and Berman, A. (2005) Map of Ashdod (84). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Brink, E. C. M., Lipschitz, N., Laza, D. and Dorani, G. (2001) Chalcolithic dwelling remains, cup marks and olive (Olea europaea) stones at Nevallat. Israel Exploration Journal 51/1: 36–43.Google Scholar
Weiss, D., Zissu, B. and Solimany, G. (2004) Map of Nes Harim (104). Jerusalem: Archaeological Survey of Israel.Google Scholar
Whitcher Kansa, S. (2004) Animal exploitation at Early Bronze Age Ashqelon, Afridar: what the bones tell us—initial analysis of the animal bones from areas E, F and G. Atiqot 45: 279–329.Google Scholar
Wright, K., Schick, R. and Brown, R. (1989) Report on a preliminary survey of the Wadi Shu'eib. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 33: 343–350.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×