Asosiy kontentga oʻtish
AkademIndex

Mahsulotlar

Ishlab chiquvchilar uchun

AkademBaseEkotizim uchun ochiq API
Maqola

Climate change at the 4.2 ka BP termination of the Indus valley civilization and Holocene south Asian monsoon variability

Michael StaubwasserDepartment of Earth Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UKFrank SirockoInstitute für Geowissenschaften Universität Mainz Mainz GermanyPieter Meiert GrootesLeibniz Labor Universität Kiel Kiel GermanyMonika SeglGeowissenschaften Universität Bremen Bremen Germany
2003en
ABI

Annotatsiya

Planktonic oxygen isotope ratios off the Indus delta reveal climate changes with a multi‐centennial pacing during the last 6 ka, with the most prominent change recorded at 4.2 ka BP. Opposing isotopic trends across the northern Arabian Sea surface at that time indicate a reduction in Indus river discharge and suggest that later cycles also reflect variations in total annual rainfall over south Asia. The 4.2 ka event is coherent with the termination of urban Harappan civilization in the Indus valley. Thus, drought may have initiated southeastward habitat tracking within the Harappan cultural domain. The late Holocene drought cycles following the 4.2 ka BP event vary between 200 and 800 years and are coherent with the evolution of cosmogenic 14 C production rates. This suggests that solar variability is one fundamental cause behind Holocene rainfall changes over south Asia.

Hali tarjima qilinmagan

Identifikatorlar

Iqtiboslar va manbalar

2 ta iqtibos0 ta foydalanilgan manba