Part I. The Evolution of Current Landscapes and Basins; Part II. Palaeoclimates; Part III. Archaeology of Human Evolution; Part IV. Palaeoecology; Part V. Quaternary Geomorphology; Part VI. Humans in the Levant.
Over eighty contributions from leading researchers review 2.5 million years of environmental change and human cultural evolution in the Levant.
Yehouda Enzel is a professor and Chair of the Institute of Earth Sciences at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has studied the geomorphology and Quaternary geology of diverse continental environments for over thirty years, as well as aspects of palaeofloods, palaeohydrology, palaeolimnology, dust, loess, and soils. In 2005, Professor Enzel was awarded the Geological Society of America Farouk El-Baz Desert Research Award. Ofer Bar-Yosef is Emeritus Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at Harvard University. He has been involved in a wide range of prehistoric site excavations since 1959, in Israel, Sinai (Egypt), Turkey, the Czech Republic, the Republic of Georgia, and the People's Republic of China. Professor Bar-Yosef has been a member of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) since 2001 and a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy since 2005.
'This comprehensive, stimulating and innovative volume explores, in
85 chapters, the complex patterns of ever-changing interactions
between Quaternary environments and prehistoric humans in the
regional crossroads between Asia, Europe and Africa (encapsulated
in the term, the Levant). The focus is mainly on Lebanon, Syria,
Jordan and Israel, but the scientific implications extend well
beyond this region. The two editors have assembled a stellar cast
of some 160 authors and have allowed them free rein to present
diverse insights into causes and consequences of human migrations,
cultural changes, agricultural origins, regional tectonics,
climatic changes and much more.' Martin Williams, The University of
Adelaide, Australia
''Monumental' does not do justice to this outstanding volume. Now,
thanks to Yehouda Enzel and Ofer Bar-Yosef, the Levant has the
foundation text it deserves. This book will be the keystone in the
arch of research for a region that is fundamental to understanding
the dispersals and evolution of hominins and humans. Read, learn
and admire.' Clive Gamble, Centre for the Archaeology of Human
Origins, University of Southampton
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