The Black Sea Flood Question: Changes in Coastline, Climate and Human Settlement

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Corporativo: SpringerLink (Online service)
Otros Autores: Yanko-Hombach, Valentina. (Editor ), Gilbert, Allan S. (Editor ), Panin, Nicolae. (Editor ), Dolukhanov, Pavel M. (Editor )
Formato: eBook
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2007.
Edición:1st ed. 2007.
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5302-3
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • General
  • Oxic, suboxic, and anoxic conditions in the Black Sea
  • Molluscan paleoecology in the reconstruction of coastal changes
  • Climate modeling results for the Circum-Pontic Region from the late Pleistocene to the mid-Holocene
  • Principal Flood Scenarios
  • Status of the Black Sea flood hypothesis
  • The Marmara Sea Gateway since ~16 ky BP: non-catastrophic causes of paleoceanographic events in the Black Sea at 8.4 and 7.15 ky BP
  • The late glacial great flood in the Ponto-Caspian basin
  • Controversy over Noah's Flood in the Black Sea: geological and foraminiferal evidence from the shelf
  • Research in the Northern Sector
  • On the post-glacial changes in the level of the Black Sea
  • The post-glacial transgression of the Black Sea
  • Climate dynamics, sea-level change, and shoreline migration in the Ukrainian sector of the Circum-Pontic Region
  • The Middle Paleolithic and early Upper Paleolithic in the northern Black Sea region
  • Environment, sea-level changes, and human migrations in the northern Pontic area during late Pleistocene and Holocene times
  • Holocene Mediterranization of the southern Crimean vegetation: paleoecological records, regional climate change, and possible non-climatic influences
  • Pontic-Caspian Mesolithic and Early Neolithic societies at the time of the Black Sea flood: a small audience and small effects
  • Fluctuations in the level of the Black Sea and Mesolithic settlement of the northern Pontic area
  • Research in the Western Sector
  • The northwestern Black Sea: climatic and sea-level changes in the Late Quaternary
  • Sea-level fluctuations and coastline migration in the northwestern Black Sea area over the last 18 ky based on high-resolution lithological-genetic analysis of sediment architecture
  • Water-level fluctuations in the Black Sea since the Last Glacial Maximum
  • Archaeological and paleontological evidence of climate dynamics, sea-level change, and coastline migration in the Bulgarian sector of the Circum-Pontic Region
  • Dendrochronology of submerged Bulgarian sites
  • The Neolithization of the north Pontic area and the Balkans in the context of the Black Sea floods
  • Holocene changes in the level of the Black Sea: Consequences at a human scale
  • Research in the Southern Sector
  • Morphotectonic development of the southern Black Sea region and the Bosphorus channel
  • Sea-level changes modified the Quaternary coastlines in the Marmara region, northwestern Turkey: What about tectonic movements?
  • Sea-level changes during the late Pleistocene-Holocene on the southern shelves of the Black Sea
  • The frozen Bosphorus and its paleoclimatic implications based on a summary of the historical data
  • Coastal changes of the Black Sea and Sea of Marmara in archaeological perspective
  • Submerged paleoshorelines in the southern and western Black Sea–Implications for inundated prehistoric archaeological sites
  • New evidence for the emergence of a maritime Black Sea economy
  • Research in the Eastern Sector
  • Holocene sea-level changes of the Black Sea
  • Sea-level changes and coastline migrations in the Russian sector of the Black Sea: Application to the Noah's Flood Hypothesis
  • Language dispersal from the Black Sea region
  • Research in the Mediterranean
  • Timing of the last Mediterranean Sea Black Sea connection from isostatic models and regional sea-level data
  • Climatic changes in the Eastern Mediterranean from the Last Glacial Maximum to the late Holocene
  • Climate, sea level, and culture in the Eastern Mediterranean 20 ky to the present.