Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7443793 | Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Thanks to systematic excavations conducted at Tell Mardikh/Ebla (Syria) during more than 40 years, we collected eleven groups of Bronze Age ceramic fragments defining a series of seven time intervals dated to between â¼2300Â BC and â¼1400Â BC. Archaeointensity experiments were performed using the Triaxe protocol that takes into account both anisotropy thermoremanent magnetization and cooling rate effects. The results, complemented by three other data previously obtained from Ebla, allow the recovery of geomagnetic field intensity variations over nearly 1000 years characterized by a V-shape, with a distinct relative intensity minimum around the 18th century BC. They also permit to constrain the occurrence of an intensity maximum between â¼2300 and â¼2000Â BC. Together with other archaeointensity data obtained from Syrian, Levantine and Anatolian regions, the results from Ebla help to make emerging a coherent pattern of geomagnetic field intensity variations in the Near East over the entire Bronze period. This evolution was marked by distinct intensity maxima at â¼2600-2500Â BC, â¼2300-2000Â BC, â¼1550-1350Â BC and at the very beginning of the first millennium BC (Iron Age), the latter showing a much higher magnitude than the three older ones. We discuss the fact that the detected geomagnetic field intensity maxima could be associated with the occurrence of archaeomagnetic jerks that appear synchronous, within age uncertainties, with significant regional climatic fluctuations.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Yves Gallet, Marta D'Andrea, Agnès Genevey, Frances Pinnock, Maxime Le Goff, Paolo Matthiae,