首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Changes of sea level, landscape and culture: A review of the south-western Baltic area between 8800 and 4000 BC
Authors:Ulrich Schmlcke  Elisabeth Endtmann  Stefanie Klooss  Michael Meyer  Dierk Michaelis  Bjrn-Henning Rickert  Doreen Rßler
Institution:

aZoological Institute – Domestication Research, University of Kiel, Olshausenstraße 40, 24118 Kiel, Germany

bInstitute for Geography and Geology, University of Greifswald, Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Straße 16, 17487 Greifswald, Germany

cInstitute for Prehistory, University of Kiel, Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 2-6, 24118 Kiel, Germany

dBaltic Sea Research Institute, Seestraße 15a, 18119 Rostock-Warnemünde, Germany

eInstitute for Botany and Landscape Ecology, University of Greifswald, Grimmer Straße 88, 17489 Greifswald, Germany

fEcology-Centre, University of Kiel, Olshausenstraße 75, 24118 Kiel, Germany

Abstract:The global warming at the end of the last glacial period led to a sea level rise, which induced substantial long-term landscape changes in the southwestern Baltic Sea. During the Preboreal and Boreal periods, this region, bordering on the Ancylus Lake in the east, was dry land with numerous lakes and rivers. However, with the beginning of the Littorina Transgression around 6700 BC, during the Atlantic period, the area became connected to the ocean. People settling along the coast of the former Ancylus Lake, Mesolithic hunter–gatherers, continuously had to adapt to rapid changes.

The Littorina Transgression made a new source available to man: the young Baltic Sea. Important settlement sites were founded in the coastal regions, and were consumed one by one by the constantly rising sea level. At the time of the decline of the sea level rise and the beginning consolidation of the coast lines, a socially motivated turn towards a productive economy started. Hunting and fishery were widely replaced by agriculture and stock farming.

To understand the interplay between all of these developments, it is necessary that scientists from a variety of disciplines undertake collective investigations. This paper presents first culture-historical, palaeozoological, palaeobotanical, palaeoecological and palaeogeographical results yielded by from the multidisciplinary research group SINCOS (Sinking Coasts) and uses these to create a new comprehensive picture of the development of the south-western Baltic Sea region during the Ancylus Lake and Littorina Sea stages.

Keywords:Baltic Sea  Sea level  Littorina Sea  Palaeogeography  Palaeoecology  Archaeology
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号