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Environmental Roots of the Late Bronze Age Crisis

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, August 2013
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Title
Environmental Roots of the Late Bronze Age Crisis
Published in
PLOS ONE, August 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0071004
Pubmed ID
Authors

David Kaniewski, Elise Van Campo, Joël Guiot, Sabine Le Burel, Thierry Otto, Cecile Baeteman

Abstract

The Late Bronze Age world of the Eastern Mediterranean, a rich linkage of Aegean, Egyptian, Syro-Palestinian, and Hittite civilizations, collapsed famously 3200 years ago and has remained one of the mysteries of the ancient world since the event's retrieval began in the late 19(th) century AD/CE. Iconic Egyptian bas-reliefs and graphic hieroglyphic and cuneiform texts portray the proximate cause of the collapse as the invasions of the "Peoples-of-the-Sea" at the Nile Delta, the Turkish coast, and down into the heartlands of Syria and Palestine where armies clashed, famine-ravaged cities abandoned, and countrysides depopulated. Here we report palaeoclimate data from Cyprus for the Late Bronze Age crisis, alongside a radiocarbon-based chronology integrating both archaeological and palaeoclimate proxies, which reveal the effects of abrupt climate change-driven famine and causal linkage with the Sea People invasions in Cyprus and Syria. The statistical analysis of proximate and ultimate features of the sequential collapse reveals the relationships of climate-driven famine, sea-borne-invasion, region-wide warfare, and politico-economic collapse, in whose wake new societies and new ideologies were created.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 3 1%
Czechia 2 <1%
Panama 1 <1%
Sweden 1 <1%
Finland 1 <1%
Germany 1 <1%
United Kingdom 1 <1%
Netherlands 1 <1%
Spain 1 <1%
Other 1 <1%
Unknown 245 95%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 45 17%
Researcher 32 12%
Student > Master 31 12%
Student > Bachelor 25 10%
Professor 16 6%
Other 64 25%
Unknown 45 17%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Arts and Humanities 53 21%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 50 19%
Social Sciences 40 16%
Environmental Science 23 9%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 21 8%
Other 24 9%
Unknown 47 18%