Abstract
A major environmental and societal event struck the Mediterranean basin
during the 9th millennium cal BP. A sudden and major climatic crisis occurred
in the Northern Hemisphere around 8200 cal BP leading to hyper arid
conditions along a tropical zone between 15° and 40° North (Near and Middle
East), cooler and wetter conditions in western and central Europe, and marked
climatic irregularity in the northern Mediterranean basin. At the same time,
frequent cultural gaps are observed in cave infillings from Greece to the
Spanish peninsula between 8500 and 8000 cal BP, making the vision of
the European Mesolithic–Neolithic transition more complex. Furthermore, a
stratigraphic and socio-economic rupture associated with a spatial
redistribution of sites characterizes the PPNB-NC/Yarmoukian transition in the
Near East. The impact of these climatic and environmental changes in the first
centuries of the neolithisation of Mediterranean Europe is discussed, using the
socio-cultural, economic, stratigraphic and chronological evidence for the
first farmers and last hunter-gatherers. This evidence is compared to recent
paleoclimatic and geo-archaeological data obtained from prehistoric contexts,
in order to measure the hydro-morphological impact on activities in valleys and
karstic rockshelters.
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