Paper No. 9
Presentation Time: 4:00 PM

RAINFALL, SPRING DISCHARGE, AND PAST HUMAN OCCUPANCY IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN


PELEG, Nadav1, MORIN, Efrat2, GVIRTZMAN, Haim1 and ENZEL, Yehouda1, (1)Institute of Earth Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Givat Ram, Jerusalem, 91904, Israel, (2)Department of Geography, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mt. Scopus Campus, Jerusalem, 91905, Israel, nadav.peleg@mail.huji.ac.il

In ancient times human activities were tightly related and sensitive to rainfall amounts and seasonal distribution. East Mediterranean settlements were concentrated around numerous small to large springs, such as in the Judean Mountains area. The goals of this study were to determine (a) the sensitivity of total discharge, recession curve, and response time of such springs to annual precipitation patterns, and (b) how spring hydrology responds to series of drought or wet years and to transitions from drought to normal and/or wet episodes (and vice versa). These goals were achieved by setting a finite-element hydro-geological flow model for selected perched springs that characterize the numerous springs throughout the carbonate karst terrain in the Judean Mountains. In addition, we estimated the effect of proposed regional past climate changes on the springs; this transfers climate change to community scale, livelihood and economic strength that were highly dependent on agricultural productivity. The results of the hydrogeological model revealed that these mountainous communities had the potential to prosper during historically wetter episodes and were probably adapted to short-term variability in annual rainfall. However, moderate to extreme droughts lasting only a few years could have led to a partial or even total abandonment of the springs as focal sites of intensive agricultural production. Spring drying eliminated the primary cause for the location of settlement. This occurred simultaneously in numerous settlements around the mountains of the southern Levant and therefore, must have caused dramatic economic and societal changes in the entire region, perhaps even resonating afar.