Rock art imagery as a proxy for Holocene environmental change: A view from Shuwaymis, NW Saudi Arabia

Author:

Guagnin Maria1,Jennings Richard1,Eager Heidi1,Parton Ash1,Stimpson Christopher1,Stepanek Christian2,Pfeiffer Madlene2,Groucutt Huw S.1,Drake Nick A.3,Alsharekh Abdullah4,Petraglia Michael D.1

Affiliation:

1. Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art, University of Oxford, UK

2. Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Germany

3. Department of Geography, King’s College London, UK

4. Department of Archaeology, King Saud University, Saudi Arabia

Abstract

The animal species depicted in the rock art of Shuwaymis, Saudi Arabia, provide a record of Holocene climatic changes, as seen by the engravers. Of 1903 animal engravings, 1514 contained sufficient detail to allow identification with confidence. In addition, the stratigraphy of the engravings and the depiction of domesticates provide a broad chronological framework that allows a division into images created during the Holocene humid phase and animals represented after the onset of desert conditions. Despite the large sample size, only 16 animal species could be identified, which represents an extraordinarily narrow species spectrum. Comparison with the scarce faunal record of the Arabian Peninsula shows that all larger animals that are thought to have been present in the area were also depicted in the rock art. The contemporaneous presence of at least four large carnivores during the Holocene humid phase suggests that prey animals were abundant, and that the landscape consisted of a mosaic of habitats, potentially with thicker vegetation along the water courses of the wadis and more open vegetation in the landscape around them. Community Earth System Models (COSMOS) climate simulations show that Shuwaymis was at the northern edge of the African Summer Monsoon rainfall regime. It is therefore possible that Shuwaymis was ecologically connected with southwestern Arabia, and that an arid barrier remained in place to the north, restricting the dispersal of Levantine species into Arabia.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archaeology,Global and Planetary Change

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