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      A review of palaeoclimates and palaeoenvironments in the Levant and Eastern Mediterranean from 25,000 to 5000 years BP: setting the environmental background for the evolution of human civilisation

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      Quaternary Science Reviews
      Elsevier BV

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          Influence of Northern Hemisphere climate and global sea level rise on the restricted Red Sea marine environment during termination I

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            Radiocarbon Chronology of the Holocene Dead Sea: Attempting a Regional Correlation

            Holocene sedimentary and geomorphic sequences from the Dead Sea region, Israel, are compared by correlation of more than 50 radiocarbon dates. The 14C dates provided the chronological basis that enabled us to detect basin-scale events that are hard to ascertain in single-site records. This paper is the first attempt to compare different Holocene records from several sites along the Dead Sea, based on their chrono-stratigraphy. Included is the first publication of the paleoclimatic record of the Nahal Darga ephemeral stream valley. Such a regional compilation is needed, because only the integration and comparative evaluation of several records can produce a reliable climatic history by establishing the height of former Dead Sea levels that may be complicated by tectonics and the rise of Mount Sedom. A relatively high level of the Holocene Dead Sea occurred during the mid-Holocene around 4400 BP or about 3000 cal BCE after calibration. The lake level fell sharply around 4000 BP, i.e. 2500 cal BCE, and later fluctuated close to early 20th century levels. The 14C-based correlation is also used to estimate the rising rates of the Mount Sedom salt diapir that are apparently smaller than 10 mm per year.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Quaternary Science Reviews
              Quaternary Science Reviews
              Elsevier BV
              02773791
              July 2006
              July 2006
              : 25
              : 13-14
              : 1517-1541
              Article
              10.1016/j.quascirev.2006.02.006
              86aa0e78-d6f3-470f-8a74-3e6e1fcb3a67
              © 2006

              http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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