4.7 Article

Analysis of geomagnetic field intensity variations in Mesopotamia during the third millennium BC with archeological implications

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 537, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116183

Keywords

archeomagnetism; archeointensity; Near East; third millennium BC; variation rates; archeological implications

Funding

  1. INSU-CNRS program PNP
  2. Simone and Cino Del Duca Foundation of the French Academy of Science

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We present new archeointensity results obtained at two multi-layer archeological sites, Tell Atij and Tell Gudeda (northeastern Syria), dated from the Early Bronze Period in the third millennium BC. The archeointensity data were obtained using the experimental protocol developed for the Triaxe magnetometer. In total, 68 fragments (204 specimens) of 151 fragments analyzed passed our selection criteria, allowing average intensity values to be estimated for 14 archeological layers, nine at Tell Atij and five at Tell Gudeda. Based on the available archeological constraints, the different archeological layers of Tell Atij and Tell Gudeda were dated between similar to 2900 BC and similar to 2600 BC and between similar to 2550 BC and similar to 2325 BC, respectively. The Tell Atij data show a significant increase in intensity over the dated period, while the results from Tell Gudeda exhibit a V-shape evolution. Using high-quality data available from Syria, the Levant and Turkey, a regional geomagnetic field intensity variation curve spanning the entire third millennium BC was constructed using a trans-dimensional Bayesian method. It clearly shows two intensity peaks, around 2600 BC and at similar to 2300 BC, associated with variation rates of similar to 0.1-0.2 mu T/yr. This indicates that the occurrence of century-scale intensity peaks with rates of variation comparable to or even slightly higher than the maximum rates observed in the modern geomagnetic field is an ubiquitous feature of the geomagnetic secular variation. From an archeological point of view, the new archeointensity data strengthen the hypothesis that the successive occupation of Tell Atij and Tell Gudeda was synchronous with the two first urban phases of Mari, making possible a sustained trade network between these settlements during the third millennium BC. We further suggest that the end of Mari's first urban phase, contemporaneous with the abandonment of Tell Atij, might have been caused by a regional drought episode around 2600 BC. More generally, the Bayesian approach used to estimate the new reference intensity variation curve offers promising chronological constraints for archeological purposes. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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