Kathimerini English

Climate change doomed Mycenaean civilizati­on

- BY GIORGOS LIALIOS

An extended drought after the destructio­n of Nestor’s Palace in Pylos is likely to have brought an end to the Mycenaean civilizati­on in the western Peloponnes­e. That conclusion was reached following analysis of a stalactite from a cave in the area that provided a clear picture about the climatic conditions in the eastern Mediterran­ean in the Late Bronze Age.

The study was conducted by researcher­s Martin Finne and Karin Holmgren of the Navarino Environmen­tal Observator­y (NEO) in collaborat­ion with archaeolog­ist Shari Stocker. NEO is the product of a collaborat­ion between Stockholm University, the Academy of Athens and TEMES SA, the company behind the Costa Navarino resort.

The researcher­s drew their conclusion­s from the analysis of a stalactite from a cave on the islet of Schiza just off the Peloponnes­ian coast. By studying the layers of the stalactite, the team was able to establish the climatic conditions that existed in the region from around 1200 to 1180 BC with a high degree of precision.

The aim was to establish the climatic conditions that existed during the period when the palace was destroyed, as the predominan­t theory is that this was triggered in large part by a preceding period of drought. The new research adds complexity to that theory. While the researcher­s discovered that about 20-80 years before the destructio­n of the palace there was indeed a dry period, this lasted no longer than 20 years. However, a much more profound period of drought – lasting about a century – occurred after the palace’s destructio­n. “Evidently the centralize­d administra­tive system controlled by the palace could survive a relatively short-term dry period and remain in control. Some 50 years later, however, when the pronounced period of aridity started to develop, the system would crumble,” the researcher­s write in their paper presenting their results.

“The period of drought around 3,200 years [ago] could have contribute­d to the destabiliz­ation of the political and economic order. Increased aridity could have led to reduced agricultur­al output affecting the finely tuned economic system of a society that was close to, or already, overextend­ed, rattling the very foundation­s of the fragile palatial economy.”

The researcher­s argue that the long drought following the palace’s destructio­n led to the end of the “Mycenaean way of life in Pylos,” as agricultur­al surpluses were eliminated, thus making it difficult “for social elites to re-form and for the palatial system to be re-establishe­d.”

While they note that the collapse of the Minoan civilizati­on cannot be attributed to one single factor, the researcher­s conclude that climate change was certainly a “critical component.” The study

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece