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Evaluating the impact of Black Sea flooding on the Neolithic of northern Turkey

World Archaeology, 2015
AbstractOriginally formulated based on marine geological research concerned with the timing and tempo of the Black Sea infilling, the Black Sea flood Hypothesis (BSfH) argues that this process was a catastrophic event ~7150 BP that greatly impacted the prehistoric peoples who lived along the ancient shoreline.
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The Neolithization of the north Pontic area and the Balkans in the context of the Black Sea floods

2006
The neolithization of Southeastern Europe, including the Balkans and the North Pontic area, took place in an environmental context. This paper examines specifically its connection to the effect of sea-level changes in the Black Sea. There is no evidence of catastrophic flooding that might have caused large-scale migrations of early farming populations.
Valentin A. Dergachev   +1 more
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ARCHAELOGY: A Victim of the Black Sea Flood Found.

Science (New York, N.Y.), 2010
Archaeologists are mulling over tantalizing images of what appears to have been a house of wood and mud littered with human artifacts now 91 meters beneath the Black Sea. The find lends further credence to the claims of two oceanographers that a torrent equaling 200 Niagara Falls cascaded from the Mediterranean Sea 7500 years ago, driving Neolithic ...
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Flood hazard assessment from storm tides, rain and sea level rise for a tidal river estuary

Natural Hazards, 2018
P. Orton   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Coastal karst forms and dating of sea flooding. Data from the Eastern Adriatic coast (Croatia)

2004
Eastern Adriatic coast (reffered in geomorphological literature as the classical Dalmatian type coast, Von Richthofen, 1886 ; in Fairbridge, 1968) borders the classical karst region of the Dinarics. There, in up to 8000m thick Mesozoic carbonates all karst forms are developed.
Surić, Maša   +2 more
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Modelling the sea-flood scenario for 4 Italian coastal plains for 2100 according to the START Project

2017
We depict the relative sea-level rise scenarios for the year 2100 from four areas of the Italian peninsula. Our estimates are based on the Rahmstorf (2007) and IPCC-AR5 reports 2013 for the RCP-8.5 scenarios (www.ipcc.ch) of climate change, adjusted for the rates of vertical land movements (isostasy and tectonics).
ANTONIOLI F.   +15 more
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Why Pacific Islanders are staying put even as rising seas flood their homes and crops

2023
Merewalesi Yee   +3 more
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