The Dez-Karun-Confluence in Lower Susiana (SW Iran) in the Last Millennia;a Case Study for the Human-Environment-Interaction

Dez and Karun are two perennial rivers originating from the Zagros mountains in highland Iran, flowing into theriverine landscape of the Susiana Plains in southwestern Iran. They are crucial elements of the landscape and centralto the region’s archaeology, especially regarding agriculture and trade,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elnaz Rashidian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Archaeological Sciences Research Centre, University of Sistan and Baluchestan 2021-03-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Archaeological Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijas.usb.ac.ir/article_6842_faad8a8050cbc26af0bce8aef7a5024a.pdf
Description
Summary:Dez and Karun are two perennial rivers originating from the Zagros mountains in highland Iran, flowing into theriverine landscape of the Susiana Plains in southwestern Iran. They are crucial elements of the landscape and centralto the region’s archaeology, especially regarding agriculture and trade, at least since the late Neolithic. The oldestknown settlements of the Susiana date back to the seventh millennium BCE in the flood plains of these two rivers.This long and continuous interaction of rivers and human settlements is worth understanding. The current Dez-Karun-confluence is assumed to be very young, especially given the very straight channel of the joint rivers directlyafter their confluence – for about 20 kilometers (km) to the south – before it regains a meandering character.In this paper, I propose that their current confluence is recent and explore this proposition based on archaeologicalevidence, historical accounts, and newly generated geoarchaeological data, as well as OSL dating. Then, I discussthe implications of this environmental change, making a case for the hybrid nature of this change as an event withinthe framework of human-environment-interaction.
ISSN:2251-743X
2676-2919