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Related: About this forumA Stalagmite May Have Just Revealed What Caused The Fall Of A Mesopotamian Empire

By Stephen Luntz
24 DEC 2018, 20:00
Around 4,200 years ago Mesopotamia's first empire, the Akkadian fell, coinciding with major transformations in Egypt and the Indus Valley, the two other great civilizations of the time. A study of stalagmites in Iran suggests a widespread climatic event may have been responsible for all three.
Civilizations rise and fall for many reasons, and the causes of the Akkadian Empire's demise remain controversial. The coincidence of timing with far away events has led some historians to propose a climatic cause. The nature, and even existence, of this event has been unclear, however, coming as it did in the middle of the Holocene era of largely stable temperatures, with no known upsurge in volcanic activity or change in solar output.
However, when a team led by The University of Oxford's Dr Stacy Carolin studied a stalagmite from Gol-e-Zard Cave in Iran's Alborz Mountains formed between 5,200 and 3,700 years ago they saw something certainly happened around the relevant time. The team report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences there were sharp spikes in the amount of magnesium relative to calcium 4,510 and 4,260 years ago, coinciding with slower growth and changes in the stone's oxygen isotopes. These changes lasted 110 and 290 years, respectively before the stalagmite composition returned to previous levels.
The industry and mining of ancient civilizations sometimes left its mark on the planet, but we know of no mechanism by which the Akkadians could have had an impact on such distant caves. Therefore it seems likely that whatever was causing the chemical change brought down the Akkadians, rather than their fall altering the chemistry of distant caves.
More:
https://www.iflscience.com/environment/a-stalagmite-may-have-just-revealed-what-caused-the-fall-of-a-mesopotamian-empire/
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A Stalagmite May Have Just Revealed What Caused The Fall Of A Mesopotamian Empire (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Dec 2018
OP
packman
(16,296 posts)1. Hmm- Around the so called "Garden of Eden" area
A drought drove out those inhabitants from a paradise into the wilderness??? Could it be the basis for that story?
WhiteTara
(31,235 posts)2. I always thought it was real estate developers
who drove the occupants of Eden out; but, climate change is a good answer too.