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Climate Change - Environment and Civilization in the Middle East

  • Book
  • © 2004

Overview

  • Surveys the old and new data and widens the scope of the study to the history and archaeology of all countries of the Near East from Iran to Anatolia to Egypt since the last Glacial Period to the present

  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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Table of contents (10 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

We live in an early stage of an interglacial period, which began some fifteen thousand years ago - a warming trend which, with the extreme ups and downs, is . still gaining momentum. There is little doubt that, sometime in the foreseeable future, the global climate will inexorably become much warmer l and many regions, such as the Near East, will become much drier. We even accelerate this process by recklessly pumping carbon dioxide from fossil fuels into the atmosphere. And if that is not enough - industrial, agricultural and disease-ridden human waste unfit for consumption will increasingly pollute the diminishing few remaining water resources. By now, we fully realize the disastrous consequences of what we do, and yet go on doing it. So what about the "Intelligence of the Homo sapiens" about which we read in our books? Obviously, one of the qualities of intelligence is the capacity to forecast the future on the basis of past experience. Since writing was invented and important or mundane matters were recorded in our region, many stories about disasters emerging either from shortage or superabundance of water are found. The one, as well as the other, often decided the fate of ancient peoples. The inherent historical understanding of the crucial role of water in the fate, and thus faith, of the human societies faded out when it moved from the semi­ arid western part of Asia to humid Europe.

Authors and Affiliations

  • J. Blaustein Institute for Desert Research, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

    Arie S. Issar

  • Maoz Zion/Mevaseret Jerusalem, Israel

    Mattanyah Zohar

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