Yasur-Landau et al./Mediterranean Resilience, 10. Anthropogenic Erosion from Hellenistic to Recent Times in the Northern Gulf of Corinth, Greece

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How to Cite: Cantu, Katrina; Norris, Richard; Papatheodorou, George; Liritzis, Ioannis; Langgut, Dafna; Geraga, Maria; Levy, Thomas. Anthropogenic Erosion from Hellenistic to Recent Times in the Northern Gulf of Corinth, Greece. Mediterranean Resilience - Collapse and Adaptation in Antique Maritime Societies. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 167-186 Feb 2024. ISBN 9781800503694.

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The problem of soil erosion due to human activities such as deforestation, pastoralism, and agriculture has long been recognized. Greece, like much of the of the Mediterranean world, is particularly susceptible to soil loss, due to the arid climate and steep, rocky terrain, and previous studies have sought to date this soil aggradation and to attribute it to human activity, climatic changes, or a combination of the two. This study uses near-shore sediment cores from Antikyra Bay, in the Gulf of Corinth, to understand the sources and timing of erosional events in the study area of the Kastrouli-Antikyra Bay Land and Sea Project. Sedimentological analysis and radiocarbon dating of foraminifera and twigs show that there are two major periods of soil aggradation in this record: the first occurred in the Hellenistic and/or Roman period (ca. 1900–2100 BP), and the second started in the Ottoman period (ca. 350 BP) and persists today. In addition to documentation of soil aggradation, two paleo-shorelines were identified during the geophysical survey. A local relative sea level curve constructed for this study suggests the shallower of the two is between ~7.7 and 8.7 thousand years old, while the deeper feature formed around 8.9 to 9.7 thousand years ago.

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  • container title
    Mediterranean Resilience: Collapse and Adaptation in Antique Maritime Societies
  • creator
    Katrina Cantu; Richard Norris; George Papatheodorou; Ioannis Liritzis; Dafna Langgut; Maria Geraga; Thomas Evan Levy
  • isbn
    9781800503700 (eBook)
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • rights holder
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • series title
    New Directions in Anthropological Archaeology
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