Time, process and catastrophism in the study of Mediterranean alluvial history: A review

Author:Bintliff, J

Article Title:Time, process and catastrophism in the study of Mediterranean alluvial history: A review

Abstract:
This article offers an update on the long-standing debate on the causes and effects of Holocene erosion and alluviation in the Mediterranean lands. The contribution of Vita-Finzi (1969) has continued to be a positive stimulus to research, and its punctuated-equilibrium perspective has survived more detailed regional studies, where as its chronology has been significantly modified. The climate dominance of Vita-Finzi and the anthropogenic dominance of later researchers such as Van Andel and co-workers must now yield to more complex multi-causal explanations in which local interactions between environmental context, climate fluctuations and human impact are being envisaged as appropriate explanations for landscape change.

Keywords: catastrophism; Mediterranean; geomorphology; alluviation; erosion; climate

DOI: 10.1080/00438240120107459

Source:WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY

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