Takarkori rock shelter (SW Libya): an archive of Holocene climate and environmental changes in the central Sahara
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2014
Citazione:
Takarkori rock shelter (SW Libya): an archive of Holocene climate and environmental changes in the central Sahara / M., Cremaschi; A., Zerboni; Mercuri, Anna Maria; Olmi, Linda; S., Biagetti; S., Di Lernia. - In: QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS. - ISSN 0277-3791. - STAMPA. - 101:(2014), pp. 36-60. [10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.07.004]
Abstract:
Rock shelters in the central Saharan massifs preserve anthropogenic stratigraphic sequences that
represent both a precious archive for the prehistory of the region and a powerful proxy data for Holocene
palaeoenvironments. The geoarchaeological (micromorphology) and archaeobotanical (pollen analysis)
approaches were integrated to investigate the anthropogenic sedimentary sequence preserved within
the Takarkori rock shelter, a Holocene archaeological site located in the Libyan central Sahara (southern
Tadrart Acacus massif). The site was occupied throughout the Early and Middle Holocene (African Humid
Period) by groups of hunteregatherers before and by pastoral communities later. The investigation on
the inner part of the sequence allows to recognize the anthropogenic contribution to sedimentation
process, and to reconstruct the major changes in the Holocene climate. At the bottom of the stratigraphic
sequence, evidence for the earliest frequentation of the site by hunters and gatherers has been recognized;
it is dated to c. 10,170 cal yr BP and is characterized by high availability of water, freshwater
habitats and sparsely wooded savannah vegetation. A second Early Holocene occupation ended at c.
8180 cal yr BP; this phase is marked by increased aridity: sediments progressively richer in organics,
testifying to a more intense occupation of the site, and pollen spectra indicating a decrease of grassland
and the spreading of cattails, which followed a general lowering of lake level or widening of shallowwater
marginal habitats near the site. After this period, a new occupational phase is dated between c.
8180 and 5610 cal yr BP; this period saw the beginning of the frequentation of pastoral groups and is
marked by an important change in the forming processes of the sequence. Sediments and pollen spectra
confirm a new increase in water availability, which led to a change in the landscape surrounding the
Takarkori rock shelter with the spreading of water bodies. The upper part of the sequence, dating
between c. 5700 and 4650 cal yr BP records a significant environmental instability towards dryer climatic
conditions, consistent with the end of the African Humid Period. Though some freshwater habitats were
still present, increasing aridity pushed the expansion of the dry savannah. The final transition to arid
conditions is indicated by the preservation of ovicaprines dung layers at the top of the sequence together
with sandstone blocks collapsed from the shelter's vault. On the contrary, the outer part of the sequence
preserves a significantly different palaeoenvironmental signal; in fact, the surface was exposed to rainfall
and a complex pedogenetic evolution of the sequence occurred, encompassing the formation of an
argillic laminar horizon at the topsoil, the evolution of a desert pavement, and the deposition of Mn-rich
rock varnish on stones. These processes are an effect of the general environmental instability that
occurred in the central Sahara since the Middle Holocene transition. Finally, the local palaeoclimatic
significance of the sequence fits well with Holocene regional and continental environmental changes recorded by many palaeohydrological records from North Africa. This highlights the potential of geoarchaeological
and archaeobotanical investigations in interpreting the palaeoenvironmental significance
of anthropogenic cave sediments in arid lands.
Tipologia CRIS:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Rock shelter; Hunter gatherers; Palynology; Sahara; pollen; climate change
Elenco autori:
M., Cremaschi; A., Zerboni; Mercuri, Anna Maria; Olmi, Linda; S., Biagetti; S., Di Lernia
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