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HORIZONTAL WATERMILL CHRONOLOGIES BASED ON 14C DATING OF ORGANICS IN MORTARS: A CASE STUDY FROM JARASH, JORDAN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2024

David Boyer*
Affiliation:
The University of Western Australia Faculty of Arts Business Law and Education, Classics & Ancient History, M204 35 Stirling Highway Crawley, Perth, Western Australia 6009, Australia
*
*Corresponding author. Email: don.boyer@uwa.edu.au
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Abstract

Horizontal watermills in the southern Levant have proved difficult to date. This study investigates the use of radiocarbon (14C) dating of various organic carbon fractions in structural mortars and carbonate deposits to identify terminus post quem (TPQ) construction dates for seven arubah watermills and two chute watermills in northern Jordan. Dating results from the various organic fractions are discussed in the contexts of carbon fraction integrity and mortar type. The arubah watermill construction dates fall into two chronological groups. Four arubah watermills have Middle Islamic (late 12th to early 14th century AD) construction dates based on macrocharcoal and bulk organic fraction ages, whereas the bulk organic fraction ages of two earlier arubah watermills straddle the Byzantine-Early Islamic transition. Their possible fifth to seventh-century construction dates are among the earliest in the southern Levant. Limited 14C data from the chute water mills suggests that the earliest may date to the sixth–seventh century period, concurrent with the older arubah watermills. The study supports the viability of the AMS 14C method to provide estimated TPQ construction dates for watermills, providing caution is exercised. Short-lived macrocharcoals have the highest integrity but are subject to severe sample loss during pretreatment. 14C ages from humic and humin fractions in earthen mortars are influenced by “old carbon” contamination, possibly a soil reservoir effect, and are centuries older than the probable construction date. Attention is drawn to the potential use of arubah carbonate deposits as proxy records of water flow, watermill use, and hydroclimate.

Information

Type
Case Study
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona
Figure 0

Figure 1 Location of the study area and other sites mentioned in the text. (Base plan, Wikipedia Commons).

Figure 1

Figure 2 Location of watermill sites included in the current study. Watermill site numbers are prefixed according to the wadi in which they are located: Wadi ed Deir (WED-), Wadi Jarash (WJ-), and Wadi Tannur (WT-).

Figure 2

Table 1 Published dates of early horizontal watermill sites in the southern Levant/Middle East (dating reliability is variable).

Figure 3

Table 2 Summary of watermill architectural details.

Figure 4

Figure 3 Arubah watermill WED-01: (a) Tomb of Germanus and the site of Tahunet es samuri in the 1930s (Kraeling 1938: pl. 7b); (b) WED-01 head race substruction in 2014; (c) Cross-section of the reconstructed arubah watermill installation showing the arubah and the hypothetical placement of mill-wheel and milling chamber in the lower storey (view looking north).

Figure 5

Figure 4 Chute watermill WED-02: (a) Plan of the extant archaeological features; (b) View along the head race masonry substruction (scale 20 cm).

Figure 6

Figure 5 Plan showing the spatial context of arubah watermills WJ-02, WJ05, WJ-06 and WJ-07 in the city area.

Figure 7

Figure 6 Arubah watermill WJ-02: Southern elevation and sample locations (2 m pole).

Figure 8

Figure 7 Arubah watermills of the Watergate cluster: (a) View of the watermill ruins and sample locations from the southwest; (b) Plan of the installations compiled from the total station survey.

Figure 9

Figure 8 Arubah watermill WJ-05: (a) Northern elevation of the tower, showing the junction with the head race substruction; (b) Cross-sectional view of the arubah and evidence of carbonate deposits removal; (c) Detailed views of carbonate deposits removal evidence.

Figure 10

Figure 9 Arubah watermill WJ-17: (a) The northern elevation of the arubah tower and head race substruction; (b) The southern elevation of the head race substruction showing sample locations.

Figure 11

Figure 10 Arubah watermill WJ-22: (a) The northern elevation of the tower; (b) The eastern elevation, showing sample locations and the evidence of the two original head races backfilled with mortared rubble (vertical pole 1 m); (c) The southern elevation showing a cross-section through the arubah.

Figure 12

Figure 11 Chute watermill WT-02: (a) Location plan; (b) View upslope showing the WT-02 chute canal, masonry substruction and sample locations.

Figure 13

Table 3 Radiocarbon dates from the case study.

Figure 14

Figure 12 Aerial mortars: (a) WJ-22 arubah tower core sample site; (b) WJ-22 photomicrograph; (c) WJ-05 arubah tower core sample site; (d) WJ-05 photomicrograph (gastropod shells arrowed); (e) WJ-06 masonry mortar sample site; (f) WJ-06 photomicrograph; (g) WED-01 head race sample site; (h) WED-01 macro photograph.

Figure 15

Figure 13 Hydraulic mortars: (a) WJ-07 sample location (pole 50 cm); (b) WJ-07 photomicrograph; (c) WT-02 sample location (pole 50 cm); (d) WT-02 macro photograph; (e) WT-02 photomicrograph.

Figure 16

Figure 14 Carbonate deposits lining hydraulic structures: (a) WJ-07 arubah sample location; (b) WJ-07 photomicrograph; (c) Watergate diversion canal sample location (pole 50 cm); (d) Watergate diversion canal macro photograph; (e) WJ-06 head race sample location; (f) WJ-06 photomicrograph.

Figure 17

Figure 15 Calibrated14C dating results (2σ) of twigs and other macrocharcoals from arubah watermills WED-01 and WJ-22 overlain on the IntCal 2020 atmospheric calibration curve.

Figure 18

Figure 16 Calibrated 14C dating results from all case study sites in descending date order, showing each site’s interpreted TPQ construction date (gray, charcoal fraction; green, BOF fraction; red, humic fraction; blue, humin fraction).

Figure 19

Figure 17 Calibrated 14C dates and interpreted TPQ construction date from the Watergate arubah watermill cluster presented in descending date order (color legend as for Figure 16).

Figure 20

Figure 18 WJ-12: (a) Location of the structure identified as “Christian” in date on site of WJ-12 on a plan of Gerasa (Kraeling 1938, Plan 1); (b) Architecture of WJ-12 interpreted from a historical photograph (Dura-Europos and Gerasa 1931 Negative number gerasa-b217∼01 b-217).

Figure 21

Figure 19 Carbonate deposits deposits: (a) Carbonate deposits lining WJ-05 arubah circa 2 m below the top of the tower; (b) Section of carbonate deposits lining a Roman aqueduct to Jarash; (c) Detailed view of the eastern wall of the arubah of WJ-22 showing the three phases of carbonate deposition (scale 20 cm).