Marshland of Cities: Deltaic Landscapes and the Evolution of Early Mesopotamian Civilization
Author(s): Jennifer Pournelle
Year: 2003
Summary
Prevailing theories of the evolution of early complex societies in southern Mesopotamia presume a uniform, arid landscape transited by Tigris and Euphrates distributaries. These theories hold that it was the seventh millennium BCE introduction of irrigation technologies from the northern alluvium to the south that began the punctuated evolution of Mesopotamian irrigation schemes. In this view, irrigation-dependent agro-pastoral production was the primary stimulus to urbanization and, millennia later, the emergence of city-states. In this dissertation, I cast serious doubt on the landscape characterization underlying this model. I argue that the archaic alluvial landscape of southern Iraq consisted in large part, not of desert or steppe, but of marshlands, and that this finding requires a comprehensive reassessment of southern Mesopotamian resource management strategies and their role in emergent complex polities. The earliest, largest, and longest-lived cities were founded and grew within and on the borders of marshlands. Large-scale irrigation was a later innovation, adopted in response to the dual processes of deltaic progradation and climate change that left cities stranded far upstream from their original resource base.
Cite this Record
Marshland of Cities: Deltaic Landscapes and the Evolution of Early Mesopotamian Civilization. Jennifer Pournelle. Doctoral Dissertation. University of California, San Diego, Anthropology. 2003 ( tDAR id: 380824) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8J67GK3
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URL: http://www.environ.sc.edu/sites/default/files/files/pournelle/dissertation_po...
Keywords
Culture
Mesopotamian
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Proto-Sumerian
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Ubaid
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Uruk
Material
Building Materials
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Ceramic
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Dating Sample
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Fauna
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Macrobotanical
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Pollen
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Shell
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Wood
Site Name
Girsu
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Lagash
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Larsa
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Tell Abu Salabikh
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Tell Abu Shahrain
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Tell Al Hiba
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Telloh
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Tell Ouelli
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Tell Raidu Sharki
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Ubaid
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Umma
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Ur
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Uruk
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Warka
Site Type
Agricultural Field or Field Feature
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Ancient Communal / Public Structure
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Ancient Governmental Structure
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Ancient Structure
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Archaeological Feature
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Artifact Scatter
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Building Substructure
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Canal or Canal Feature
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Fish Trap / Weir
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Hamlet / Village
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Hearth
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Kiln
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Non-Domestic Structures
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Palace
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Plaza
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Refuse Pit
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Resource Extraction / Production / Transportation Structure or Features
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Road, Trail, and Related Structures or Features
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Shell Midden
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Shipping-Related Structure
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Storage Pit
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Temple
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Town / City
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Trash Midden
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Water Control Feature
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Water-Related
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Ziggurat
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Investigation Types
Archaeological Overview
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Environment Research
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Ethnographic Research
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Ethnohistoric Research
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Historic Background Research
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Methodology, Theory, or Synthesis
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Reconnaissance / Survey
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Remote Sensing
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Research Design / Data Recovery Plan
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Systematic Survey
General
Air Photo Imagery
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Complex Political and Social Organizations
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complex societies
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Complex Taphonomic History
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Cultural Ecology
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Cultural Ecology & Ethnography
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Cultural Ecology & Subsistence
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Delta
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Delta Ethnographic Summary
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Delta Sites
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Geoarchaology
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Image Analysis
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Irrigation Canal System
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Landscape Archaeology
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Landscape Archeology
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Landscape Evolution
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Malacology
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Marsh Arabs
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Marsh Area
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Marsh Environment
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Marsh Grasses
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Marshland Resources
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Mudbrick Analysis
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Reed Bundle
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Reed House
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Reed Mat
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Riparian
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Riparian Communities
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Riparian Vegetation
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Satellite Remote Sensing
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Tell
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Turtleback
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Geographic Keywords
Iraq
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Mesopotamia
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Sumer
Temporal Keywords
Early Dynastic
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Sumerian
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Ubaid Period
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Uruk Period
Temporal Coverage
Calendar Date: -6500 to -2500
Spatial Coverage
min long: 45.592; min lat: 31.224 ; max long: 45.692; max lat: 31.299 ;
Individual & Institutional Roles
Principal Investigator(s): Jennifer Pournelle
File Information
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