Disentangling late quaternary fluvial and climatic drivers of palaeohydrological change in the Najaf Sea basin, Western Iraq

Author:

Briant R. M.1ORCID,Jotheri J.2ORCID,Al‐Ameri I.13,Ahmed A.1,Bateman M. D.4ORCID,Engels S.1,Garzanti E.5,Nymark A.67,Reynolds T. E.6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography, Birkbeck University of London London UK

2. Department of Archaeology University of Al‐Qadisiyah Diwaniyah Iraq

3. Department of Geography University of Baghdad Baghdad Iraq

4. Department of Geography University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

5. Università degli Studi di Milano‐Bicocca Milan Italy

6. Department of Archaeology, Birkbeck University of London London UK

7. Department of Anthropology Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractThe water resource provided by lake basins in the western desert of Iraq is important for human occupation of areas outside the Tigris‐Euphrates floodplain, both in the past and into the future. This paper presents the first geomorphological and geochronological study of the date of formation of the Najaf Sea and the only such study of any lake basin to the west of Mesopotamia. Geomorphological shoreline features and a palaeochannel linking to the Euphrates were studied and dated using optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and radiocarbon dating. Provenance was determined using heavy mineral analysis. Past environments in the Najaf Sea were reconstructed by molluscan analysis. The earliest OSL ages date from c. 30 000 and 22 000 years ago and seem to predate lake formation. Younger OSL ages date the highest lake level at c. 19 m asl to between 1620–1760 AD (base) to 1906–1974 AD (near surface). The radiocarbon ages are affected by a freshwater reservoir effect, but the maximum ages recorded for either of the c. 15 m and c. 17 m asl shorelines are c. 800 cal. BC. This predates the first archaeological sites in the Najaf basin and is similar to maximum ages of c. 850 and c. 1100 cal. BC from the associated palaeochannel. This timing does not seem to be linked to a humid climate event. We therefore conclude that the establishment of the Najaf Sea in the Najaf basin occurred as a result of an avulsion event within the Euphrates system that diverted flow to the basin. The trigger for this avulsion event likely related to rapid sediment accumulation and may have been either autogenic or driven by human activity. This study therefore suggests that Najaf Sea formation facilitated human expansion beyond the Tigris‐ Euphrates floodplain and occurred due to avulsion of the Euphrates.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

British Institute for the Study of Iraq

Publisher

Wiley

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