麻豆视频

Dry landscape featuring a hill and partly cloudy sky
John Marston The researchers scrutinized tree ring samples recovered from the Midas Mound Tumulus at Gordion, a human-made 53-meter-tall structure located west of Ankara, Turkey.

Rare drought coincided with Hittite Empire collapse

The collapse of the Hittite Empire in the Late Bronze Age has been blamed on various factors, from war with other territories to internal strife. Now, an interdisciplinary collaboration used tree ring and isotope records to pinpoint a more likely 鈥 and prescient 鈥 culprit: three straight years of severe drought in an already dry period.

The group鈥檚 paper, 鈥,鈥 published Feb. 8 in Nature.

The Hittite Empire emerged around 1650 BC in semi-arid central Anatolia, a region that includes much of modern Turkey. For the next five centuries, the Hittites were one of the major powers of the ancient world, alongside the Assyrian, Babylonian and Egyptian empires, and they remained remarkably resilient amid the various upheavals 鈥 social, political, economic and environmental 鈥 of the age. But around 1200 BC, the capital at Hattusa was abandoned, and the Hittite Empire was no more.

To find an explanation for the empire鈥檚 much-debated collapse, , Distinguished Professor of Arts and 麻豆视频 in Classical Archaeology and the paper鈥檚 lead author, teamed up with , professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, both in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频.

Manning and Sparks combined the capabilities of their respective labs, the  and the  (COIL), to scrutinize samples from the Midas Mound Tumulus at Gordion, a human-made 53-meter-tall structure located west of Ankara, Turkey. The mound contains a wooden structure believed to be a burial chamber for a relative of King Midas, possibly his father. But equally important are the juniper trees 鈥 which grow slowly and live for centuries, even a millennium 鈥 that were used to build the structure and contain a hidden paleoclimatic record of the region.

The researchers looked at the patterns of tree-ring growth, with unusually narrow rings likely indicating dry conditions, in conjunction with changes in the ratio of carbon-12 to carbon-13 recorded in the rings, which indicate the tree鈥檚 response to the availability of moisture.

鈥淪table isotopes are one of our strongest ways of looking into the past and asking questions about the physiological state of that plant 1,000, 2,000, 3,000 years ago,鈥 Sparks said. 鈥淭hese are very, very small quantities of wood: Some of the tree-rings are only fractions of a millimeter wide. You鈥檙e basically trying to measure a neutron and a very small amount of carbon in wood. So it becomes technologically very difficult to do. Sturt and I worked for three or four years to make this work really well.鈥

Their analysis finds a general shift to drier conditions from the later 13th into the 12th century BC, and they peg a dramatic continuous period of severe dryness to approximately 1198鈥96 BC, plus or minus three years, which matches the timeline of the Hittite鈥檚 disappearance.

鈥淲e have two complementary sets of evidence,鈥 Manning said. 鈥淭he tree-ring widths indicate something really unusual is going on, and because it鈥檚 very narrow rings, that means the tree is struggling to stay alive. In a semi-arid environment, the only plausible reason that鈥檚 happening is because there鈥檚 little water, therefore it鈥檚 a drought, and this one is particularly serious for three consecutive years. Critically, the stable isotope evidence extracted from the tree-rings confirms this hypothesis, and we can establish a consistent pattern despite this all being over 3,150 years ago.鈥

One year of drought in a semi-arid environment would be manageable, with subsistence farmers typically having enough stored provisions to get them through the year. By the second year, a crisis would develop and 鈥渢he whole system would start to break down,鈥 said Manning, who cited the Ottoman Empire鈥檚 near collapse in the early 17th century from two consecutive years of dramatic drought.

At three consecutive years of drought, hundreds of thousands of people, including the enormous Hittite army, would face famine, even starvation. The tax base would crumble, as would the government. Survivors would be forced to migrate, an early example of the inequality of climate change.

鈥淧robably some of what goes wrong at the end of the Bronze Age is a version of exactly what we see going wrong in the modern world, which is that groups of people are trying to move somewhere else, because they aren鈥檛 in a place that鈥檚 regarded as suitable or good,鈥 Manning said. 鈥淭hey can see or hear that there are better opportunities elsewhere.鈥

Severe climate events may not have been the sole reason for the Hittite Empire鈥檚 collapse, the researchers noted, and not all of the ancient Near East suffered crises at the time. But this particular stretch of drought may have been a tipping point, at least for the Hittites.

鈥淪ituations where you get prolonged, really extreme events like this for two or three years are the ones that can undo even well-organized, resilient societies,鈥 Manning said.  

That finding has particular relevance today, when global populations are reckoning with catastrophic climate change and a warming planet.

鈥淲e may be approaching our own breaking point,鈥 Manning said. 鈥淲e have a range of things we can cope with, but as we are stretched too far beyond that, we鈥檒l hit a point where our adaptative capacities are no longer matched against what we鈥檙e facing.鈥

Co-authors include former research associate Brita Lorentzen, 鈥06, Ph.D. 鈥15, now with the University of Georgia, and Cindy Kocik, M.A. 鈥14, now with the University of Wisconsin, La Crosse. The wood samples were analyzed for carbon isotope ratio by Kimberlee Sparks, a research support specialist with COIL.

The research was partially supported by the Computational Research on the Ancient Near East project, which is funded by the Social 麻豆视频 and Humanities Research Council of Canada and based at the University of Toronto.

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Close up of tree rings
Cornell Tree-Ring Laboratory The growth rings inside a juniper tree, combined with isotope records, helped researchers pinpoint a likely culprit for the collapse of the Hittite Empire: three straight years of severe drought, approximately 1198鈥96 BC, in an already dry period.