PLoS ONE (Jan 2025)

South Arabia's prehistoric monument landscape shows social resilience to climate change.

  • Joy McCorriston,
  • Lawrence Ball,
  • Michael J Harrower,
  • Ian M Hamilton,
  • Sarah J Ivory,
  • Matthew J Senn,
  • Tara Steimer-Herbet,
  • Abigail F Buffington,
  • Ali Ahmad Al-Kathiri,
  • Ali Musalam Al-Mahri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323544
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 5
p. e0323544

Abstract

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In arid regions across northern Africa, Asia and Arabia, ancient pastoralists constructed small-scale stone monuments of varying form, construction, placement, age, and function. Classification studies of each type have inhibited a broader model of their collective and enduring role within desert socio-ecosystems. Our multivariate analysis of 371 archaeological monuments in the arid Dhofar region of Oman identifies environmental and cultural factors that influenced variable placement and construction across a 7000-year history. Our results show that earlier monuments were built by larger, concurrent groups during the Holocene Humid Period (10,000-6000 cal BP). With increasing aridification, smaller groups constructed monuments and eventually switched to building them in repetitive visits. Our model emphasizes the core role of monuments as a flexible technology in social resilience among desert pastoralists.