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Research Article

Tectonic environments of ancient civilizations in the eastern hemisphere

Eric R. Force

E-mail address:ejforce@aol.com

Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85743

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First published: 15 August 2008
Cited by: 6

Abstract

The map distribution of ancient civilizations shows a remarkable correspondence with tectonic boundaries related to the southern margin of the Eurasian plate. Quantification of this observation shows that the association is indeed significant, and both historical records and archaeoseismological work show that these civilizations commonly suffered earthquake damage. Close association of ancient civilizations with tectonic activity seems to be a pattern of some kind. In the hope that dividing the civilizations into subsets might clarify the meaning of this relation, primary and derivative civilizations were compared. Derivative civilizations prove to be far more closely related to the tectonic boundaries. Similarly, the civilizations that endured the longest (and that have been described as most static) are systematically the farthest from plate boundaries. It is still unclear how the relation actually worked in ancient cultures, i.e., what aspects of tectonism promoted complexity. Linkages to water and other resources, trade (broadly construed), and societal response seem likely. Volcanism appears not to be involved. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Number of times cited: 6

  • , Seismic faults and sacred sanctuaries in Aegean antiquity, Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, 128, 5-6, (711), (2017).
  • , Climates, Landscapes, and Civilizations, (195)
  • , Landscapes of human evolution: models and methods of tectonic geomorphology and the reconstruction of hominin landscapes, Journal of Human Evolution, 60, 3, (257), (2011).
  • , Americanist Archaeologies: 2008 in Review, American Anthropologist, 111, 2, (137-145), (2009).
  • , Birth of ancient civilizations: Reply to comments of Rongxing Guo, Geoarchaeology, 24, 6, (849-850), (2009).
  • , On the birth of ancient civilizations: Comments on a paper by Eric R. Force, Geoarchaeology, 24, 6, (846-848), (2009).