Europe’s Bronze Age Collapse Not Caused by Climate Change

News November 19, 2014

(Photo Unit National Monuments Service, Ireland)
SHARE:
Bronze-Age-Dun-Aonghasa
(Photo Unit National Monuments Service, Ireland)

BRADFORD, ENGLAND—The colder, wetter conditions that have been blamed for the population collapse in Europe at the end of the Bronze Age occurred two generations later, according to environmental scientists from the University of Bradford, the University of Leeds, University College Cork, and Queen’s University Belfast. The scientists used new statistical techniques to analyze more than 2,000 radiocarbon dates taken from hundreds of archaeological sites in Ireland. Then they compared the data to climate records from peat bogs in Ireland and evidence of climate change across northwest Europe between 1200 and 500 B.C. “Our evidence shows definitively that the population decline in this period cannot have been caused by climate change,” said Ian Armit of the University of Bradford. He thinks social and economic stress, caused by the transition to iron production, and the resulting collapse of copper and tin trade networks, led to conflict and population collapse. “Although climate change was not directly responsible for the collapse it is likely that the poor climatic conditions would have affected farming. This would have been particularly difficult for vulnerable communities, preventing population recovery for several centuries,” Armit said. To read about rituals that may have been practiced by Bronze Age people, see "The Wolf Rites of Winter."

  • Features September/October 2014

    Erbil Revealed

    How the first excavations in an ancient city are supporting its claim as the oldest continuously inhabited place in the world

    Read Article
    (Courtesy and Copyright Golden Eagle Global, Kurdistan, Iraq)
  • Features September/October 2014

    Castaways

    Illegally enslaved and then marooned on remote Tromelin Island for fifteen years, with only archaeology to tell their story

    Read Article
    (Richard Bouhet/ Getty Images)
  • Letter from the Bronx September/October 2014

    The Past Becomes Present

    A collection of objects left behind in a New York City neighborhood connects students with the lives of people who were contemporary with their great-great-great-grandparents

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Celia J. Bergoffen Ph.D. R.P.A.)
  • Artifacts September/October 2014

    Silver Viking Figurine

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Claus Feveile/Østfyns Museum)