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A wetland oasis at Wadi Gharandal spanning 125–70 ka on the human migration trail in southern Jordan
- 1.0532939 - GFÚ 2022 RIV US eng J - Journal Article
Al-Saqarat, B. S. - Abbas, M. - Lai, Z. P. - Gong, S. - Alkuisi, M. - Abu Hamad, A. M. B. - Carling, P. A. - Jansen, John D.
A wetland oasis at Wadi Gharandal spanning 125–70 ka on the human migration trail in southern Jordan.
Quaternary Research. Roč. 100, March (2021), s. 154-169. ISSN 0033-5894. E-ISSN 1096-0287
Institutional support: RVO:67985530
Keywords : hyperarid * stimulated luminescence * palaeoclimate * humans * Levallois lithics * archaeology * Levant
OECD category: Physical geography
Impact factor: 2.797, year: 2021
Method of publishing: Limited access
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/quaternary-research/article/abs/wetland-oasis-at-wadi-gharandal-spanning-12570-ka-on-the-human-migration-trail-in-southern-jordan/6C53AA3237A55474899B9EA14EA3A605
Former lakes and wetlands can provide valuable insights to the late Pleistocene environments encountered by the first humans to enter the Levant from Africa. Fluvial incision along Wadi Gharandal in hyperarid southern Jordan has exposed remnants of a small riverine wetland that accumulated as a sedimentary sequence up to similar to 20 m thick. We conducted a chronometric and sedimentological study of this wetland, including 10 optically stimulated luminescence dates. The wetland sequence accumulated during the period similar to 125 to 70 ka in response to a positive water balance coupled with a (possibly coseismic) landslide that dammed the outlet. The valley fill was dissected when the dam was incised shortly after similar to 36 +/- 3 ka. Comparison of our ages with regional palaeoclimate indicates that the Gharandal oasis developed during the relatively humid Marine Isotope Stage 5. A minimum age of 74 +/- 7 ka for two Levallois flakes collected from stratified sediments suggests that the oasis was visited by humans during the critical 130-90 ka time window of human migration out of Africa. Gharandal joins a growing network of freshwater sites that enabled humans to cross areas of the Levant and Arabia along corridors of human dispersal.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0311318
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Number of the records: 1