Holocene vegetation and climate history of the northern Golan heights (Near East)

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Abstract

In this paper we present and discuss palynological results based on a composite profile from Birkat Ram crater lake (Northern Golan, Near East) in order to reconstruct the environmental history, including human impact, of the last 6500 years. Furthermore we apply a newly-developed botanical climatological transfer function to reconstruct climate variations in the northern Golan Heights based on this pollen data-set. The Birkat Ram record is strongly influenced by anthropogenic indicators in the pollen diagram with high quantities during the Chalcolithic period/Early Bronze Age, during the Hellenistic-Roman-Byzantine periods, during the Crusader period and finally during modern times. The palaeoclimate reconstruction method used is based on a Bayesian approach and is robust in avoiding the influence of these strong anthropogenic signals on the reconstruction results. The area has always had Mediterranean climate conditions and no distinctive climate changes can be identified during the past 6500 years. Because of the orography of the Mt. Hermon region the particular geographical position of the northern Golan Heights is obviously capable of buffering large-scale fluctuations in precipitation, which have otherwise been documented for several regions in the Near East. © Springer Verlag 2007.

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Neumann, F., Schölzel, C., Litt, T., Hense, A., & Stein, M. (2007). Holocene vegetation and climate history of the northern Golan heights (Near East). In Vegetation History and Archaeobotany (Vol. 16, pp. 329–346). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-006-0046-x

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