TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental setting of the Neolithic Agricultural Revolution across the Fertile Crescent
AU - Stein, Mordechai
AU - Goring-Morris, Nigel
AU - Ben Dor, Yoav
AU - Erel, Yigal
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/5/1
Y1 - 2025/5/1
N2 - The transformation of human culture from hunter-gatherer societies to sedentary farming communities represents the most prominent revolution in human history, termed the Neolithic Agricultural Revolution (NAR). The NAR was manifested in the cultivation and domestication of wild plants across the ‘Fertile Crescent’ from around the 11th millennium BP. Here, we investigate the environmental conditions that enabled the establishment of the first agricultural settlements in the southern Jordan Valley and compare these settings to the northern segments of the ‘Fertile Crescent’ (northern Mesopotamia). In particular we investigated the mineralogical composition of surface cover soils and the hydrological conditions in the Gilgal Basin where a few of the early agriculture settlements of the late Natufian-PPNA cultures were established. We focused our study on the Salibiya sedimentary section (and archeological sites) in the Gilgal Basin, where a sequence of fine detritus sediments accumulated during the post glacial to the early Holocene period. OSL ages from the Salibiya sedimentary section lie between ∼24 and 11 ka BP, spanning the time of Lake Lisan retreat from its highest stands of ∼180 ± 10 m below mean sea level (= m bmsl) to below 320 m bmsl. The Salibiya sedimentary section consists of silty detritus sediments that comprise recycled mountain soils washed from the adjacent Samarian Mountains to the Gilgal Basin. The ‘mountain soils’ in their turn consist of desert dust grains (e.g., quartz, calcite, clays) that were blown to the Levant region from the north Sahara deserts, mostly during arid periods. Enhanced amounts of desert dusts were blown to the region during hyperarid periods that coincided with the Heinrich Stadials (HS) in the northern latitudes, e.g., at ∼24 ka, ∼16ka and ∼13ka. The hyperarid and dusty periods (which were harsh for the early-Natufian hunter-gatherers) were followed by wetter intervals when fresh groundwater activity resumed in the Judean and Samarian Mountains, e.g., at ∼16-15 and ∼12-11 ka. The availability of fertile ‘mountain soils’ and water during and after the Younger Dryas provided a favorable environmental setting that supported the establishment of early agriculture settlements in the Gilgal Basin (and others) in the Jordan Valley and impacted the transformation from the Epipalaeolithic Early Natufian hunter-gatherers to the Late Natufian and Pre-Pottery Neolithic A and B (PPNA, B) cultures.
AB - The transformation of human culture from hunter-gatherer societies to sedentary farming communities represents the most prominent revolution in human history, termed the Neolithic Agricultural Revolution (NAR). The NAR was manifested in the cultivation and domestication of wild plants across the ‘Fertile Crescent’ from around the 11th millennium BP. Here, we investigate the environmental conditions that enabled the establishment of the first agricultural settlements in the southern Jordan Valley and compare these settings to the northern segments of the ‘Fertile Crescent’ (northern Mesopotamia). In particular we investigated the mineralogical composition of surface cover soils and the hydrological conditions in the Gilgal Basin where a few of the early agriculture settlements of the late Natufian-PPNA cultures were established. We focused our study on the Salibiya sedimentary section (and archeological sites) in the Gilgal Basin, where a sequence of fine detritus sediments accumulated during the post glacial to the early Holocene period. OSL ages from the Salibiya sedimentary section lie between ∼24 and 11 ka BP, spanning the time of Lake Lisan retreat from its highest stands of ∼180 ± 10 m below mean sea level (= m bmsl) to below 320 m bmsl. The Salibiya sedimentary section consists of silty detritus sediments that comprise recycled mountain soils washed from the adjacent Samarian Mountains to the Gilgal Basin. The ‘mountain soils’ in their turn consist of desert dust grains (e.g., quartz, calcite, clays) that were blown to the Levant region from the north Sahara deserts, mostly during arid periods. Enhanced amounts of desert dusts were blown to the region during hyperarid periods that coincided with the Heinrich Stadials (HS) in the northern latitudes, e.g., at ∼24 ka, ∼16ka and ∼13ka. The hyperarid and dusty periods (which were harsh for the early-Natufian hunter-gatherers) were followed by wetter intervals when fresh groundwater activity resumed in the Judean and Samarian Mountains, e.g., at ∼16-15 and ∼12-11 ka. The availability of fertile ‘mountain soils’ and water during and after the Younger Dryas provided a favorable environmental setting that supported the establishment of early agriculture settlements in the Gilgal Basin (and others) in the Jordan Valley and impacted the transformation from the Epipalaeolithic Early Natufian hunter-gatherers to the Late Natufian and Pre-Pottery Neolithic A and B (PPNA, B) cultures.
KW - Dead Sea
KW - Environmental Prehistory
KW - Fertile Crescent
KW - Hydro-Climate changes
KW - Hydroclimate
KW - Jordan Valley
KW - Levant
KW - Loessian soils
KW - Natufian
KW - Neolithic Agricultural Revolution
KW - OSL dating
KW - Pedogenesis
KW - PPNA
KW - PPNB
KW - Quaternary Geology and Prehistory
KW - Tigris
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85218866250&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2025.109265
DO - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2025.109265
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
AN - SCOPUS:85218866250
SN - 0277-3791
VL - 355
JO - Quaternary Science Reviews
JF - Quaternary Science Reviews
M1 - 109265
ER -