How climate change ended world's early civilisations
'Megacities' of the Indus Valley region of Pakistan and north-west
India declined and never recovered because of a dramatic increase in
drought conditions.
The world's first great civilisations appear to have collapsed
because of an ancient episode of climate change - according to new
research carried out by scientists and archaeologists.
Their investigation demonstrates that the Bronze Age 'megacities' of
the Indus Valley region of Pakistan and north-west India declined during
the 21st and 20th centuries BC and never recovered - because of a
dramatic increase in drought conditions.

A city settlement at the Mohenjo-daro in Pakistan |
The research, carried out by the University of Cambridge and India's
Banaras Hindu University, reveals that a series of droughts lasting some
200 years hit the Indus Valley zone - and was probably responsible for
the rapid decline of the great Bronze Age urban civilisation of that
region.
The findings correlate chronologically with drought evidence found
over recent years by other scientists who have examined deposits from
the bottom of the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman as well as
stalactites from caves in North east India and southern Arabia.
It's now thought likely that the droughts at around that time were
partly responsible for the collapse not only of the Indus Valley
Civilisation, but also of the ancient Akkadian Empire, Old Kingdom Egypt
and possibly Early Bronze Age civilisations in Greece.
"Our evidence suggests that it was the most intense period of drought
- probably due to frequent monsoon failure - in the 5,000 year-long
period we have examined," said University of Cambridge Palaeoclimate
scientist Prof David Hodell.
The scientists studying the collapse of the Indus Valley Civilisation
obtained their new evidence from a dried-up lake bed near India's
capital New Delhi which is just 40 miles east of the eastern edge of the
Indus Valley Civilisation.
They detected the climatic conditions by examining isotopic evidence
from the shells of snails that had lived between 6,500 years ago and
1,500 years ago.
The isotopic values of the calcium carbonate in the snails' shells
reflected the isotopic value in the water in the lakes at the time they
lived.
Because water with oxygen 16 isotopes evaporates more quickly than
water with 'heavier' oxygen 18 isotopes, the scientists were able to
measure changes in evaporation rates over time. This allowed them to
identify the start and end of a previously unknown 200 year-long severe
drought in the north-west India region which lasted from around 2100BC
to approximately 1900 BC.
In that period, the Indus Valley 'megacities' - some with populations
of up to 100,000 - rapidly declined. Populations shrank and the old
urban civilisation, which had lasted 500 years, collapsed.
"Archaeologists are really in a unique position when investigating
climate change in the past, because we hopefully get to see what people
were doing in the 'before, during and after' phases.
We therefore get an opportunity to investigate how ancient
populations responded to climatic and environmental change. How did they
cope with periods of water stress? Were their existing ways of life
resilient? Were they forced to adapt in order to survive, and if so,
precisely what did they do," said University of Cambridge archaeologist,
Dr. Cameron Petrie.
"For the Indus populations, it looks as though living in large groups
became untenable, and it was much more sustainable to live in smaller
groups. This is of course a huge simplification of a complex process,
but this transformation is the underlying dynamic.
"By investigating responses to environmental pressures and threats in
the past, we can hopefully learn from the past to engage with the
public, and the relevant governmental and administrative bodies to be
more pro-active in issues such as the management and administration of
water supply, the balance of urban and rural development, and even the
importance of preserving cultural heritage in the future," said Dr.
Petrie.
- The Independent |