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Extreme wet conditions coincident with Bronze Age abandonment of upland areas in Britain

Extreme wet conditions coincident with Bronze Age abandonment of upland areas in Britain
Extreme wet conditions coincident with Bronze Age abandonment of upland areas in Britain
Abandonment of farming systems on upland areas in southwest Britain during the Late Bronze Age – some 3000 years ago – is widely considered a ‘classic’ demonstration of the impact of deteriorating climate on the vulnerability of populations in such marginal environments. Here we test the hypothesis that climate change drove the abandonment of upland areas by developing new chronologies for human activity on upland areas during the Bronze Age across southwest Britain (Dartmoor, Exmoor and Bodmin Moor). We find Bronze Age activity in these areas spanned 3900–2950 calendar years ago with abandonment by 2900 calendar years ago. Holocene Irish bog and lake oak tree populations provide evidence of major shifts in hydroclimate across western Britain and Ireland, coincident with ice rafted debris layers recognized in North Atlantic marine sediments, indicating significant changes in the latitude and intensity of zonal atmospheric circulation across the region. We observe abandonment of upland areas in southwest Britain coinciding with a sustained period of extreme wet conditions that commenced 3100 calendar years ago. Our results are consistent with the view that climate change increased the vulnerability of these early farming communities and led to a less intensive use of such marginal environments across Britain.
Dartmoor reaves, Human response, Irish bog oaks, Late Bronze Age, Marginal upland environments, North Atlantic westerly airflow
2213-3054
69-79
Turney, Chris S.M.
5149b57c-77c2-4375-97a2-a4f00aa74d97
Jones, Richard T.
f8b5db51-10c7-4b4e-81e3-e5c3833eb2ce
Thomas, Zoë A.
4b512d3a-3478-4270-9fdd-61256aa640d3
Palmer, Jonathan G.
6b327a39-f234-4cdc-ae73-0c48340f05b3
Brown, David
846fdd8a-514a-49f0-b02f-7ea8c93cd1f1
Turney, Chris S.M.
5149b57c-77c2-4375-97a2-a4f00aa74d97
Jones, Richard T.
f8b5db51-10c7-4b4e-81e3-e5c3833eb2ce
Thomas, Zoë A.
4b512d3a-3478-4270-9fdd-61256aa640d3
Palmer, Jonathan G.
6b327a39-f234-4cdc-ae73-0c48340f05b3
Brown, David
846fdd8a-514a-49f0-b02f-7ea8c93cd1f1

Turney, Chris S.M., Jones, Richard T., Thomas, Zoë A., Palmer, Jonathan G. and Brown, David (2016) Extreme wet conditions coincident with Bronze Age abandonment of upland areas in Britain. Anthropocene, 13 (3), 69-79. (doi:10.1016/j.ancene.2016.02.002).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Abandonment of farming systems on upland areas in southwest Britain during the Late Bronze Age – some 3000 years ago – is widely considered a ‘classic’ demonstration of the impact of deteriorating climate on the vulnerability of populations in such marginal environments. Here we test the hypothesis that climate change drove the abandonment of upland areas by developing new chronologies for human activity on upland areas during the Bronze Age across southwest Britain (Dartmoor, Exmoor and Bodmin Moor). We find Bronze Age activity in these areas spanned 3900–2950 calendar years ago with abandonment by 2900 calendar years ago. Holocene Irish bog and lake oak tree populations provide evidence of major shifts in hydroclimate across western Britain and Ireland, coincident with ice rafted debris layers recognized in North Atlantic marine sediments, indicating significant changes in the latitude and intensity of zonal atmospheric circulation across the region. We observe abandonment of upland areas in southwest Britain coinciding with a sustained period of extreme wet conditions that commenced 3100 calendar years ago. Our results are consistent with the view that climate change increased the vulnerability of these early farming communities and led to a less intensive use of such marginal environments across Britain.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 23 February 2016
Published date: 1 March 2016
Additional Information: Funding Information: We thank numerous colleagues for discussing these ideas with special mention to Mike Baillie. C. S. M. Turney acknowledges the support of the Australian Research Council ( FL100100195 and DP130104156 ). We thank two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript. Publisher Copyright: © 2016 Elsevier Ltd
Keywords: Dartmoor reaves, Human response, Irish bog oaks, Late Bronze Age, Marginal upland environments, North Atlantic westerly airflow

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 476053
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476053
ISSN: 2213-3054
PURE UUID: fa60f70d-ef14-47e5-a341-4e19bda2eb6f
ORCID for Zoë A. Thomas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2323-4366

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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2023 17:05
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:10

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Contributors

Author: Chris S.M. Turney
Author: Richard T. Jones
Author: Zoë A. Thomas ORCID iD
Author: Jonathan G. Palmer
Author: David Brown

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