Late Miocene Euphrates River Drained Into A Partially Desiccated Eastern Mediterranean
--
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-026-01962-x <-- shared paper
--
[the paleogeographic reconstruction is outstanding, including the strength and information conveyed so well in that figure, kudos!]
H/T @lina Jakaitė-Darkšė
“Although the Euphrates River - stretching ~3,000 km across Western Asia - has shaped the region’s geology for millions of years, the timing of its origin and the evolution of its course remain enigmatic. So far, two contrasting hypotheses have been proposed to explain the fluvial system’s Late Neogene path: termination in Anatolia at a palaeo-lake or the Mediterranean, or a southeastward continuation to Arabia. Here [they] use seismic-reflection and topographic data to show that two previously identified sedimentary accumulations - deposited during the terminal phase of the Late Miocene Messinian salinity crisis - resulted from dual riverine systems that drained into a partially desiccated eastern Mediterranean before avulsing toward the Persian Gulf and converging to form the modern Euphrates River. From probabilistic sediment-budget modelling, [they] show that although the latest Messinian drainage basins were an order of magnitude smaller than their present-day extents, the total palaeo-discharge exceeded that of the modern Tigris, Euphrates and Nile rivers combined, indicating intense palaeo-precipitation and high palaeo-relief. These results suggest that plate-margin deformation both controlled the fluvial avulsions that diverted the Euphrates River from the Anatolian–Eurasian Plate to the Arabian Plate, and established the conditions necessary for the development of the alluvial Fertile Crescent…”
#water #hydrology #hydrography #paleogeography #Euphrates #river #Miocene #reconstruction #spatialreconstruction #geology #change #erosion #MiddleEast #spatialanalysis #spatiotemporal #Neogene #Anatolia #paleolake #Mediterranean #Arabia #Messinian #remotesensing #model #modeling #topography #hydrogeomorphology #geomorphology #PersianGulf #sediment #paleodischarge #volume #Tigris #elevation #platetectonics #structuralgeology #platemargin #fluvial #avulsion #FertileCrescent
The Fertile Crescent, often called the 'cradle of civilization', is the region in the Middle East that curves like a quarter-moon shape from the Persian Gulf through modern-day southern Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel, and northern Egypt. #History #Writing #Uruk #Urbanization #Ur #Sumer #Mesopotamia #FertileCrescent #Eridu #City #Babylon #HistoryFact https://whe.to/ci/1-17-en/
Fertile Crescent: A Modern Term For An Ancient Region

The Fertile Crescent, often called the 'cradle of civilization', is the region in the Middle East that curves like a quarter-moon shape from the Persian Gulf through modern-day southern Iraq, Syria...

World History Encyclopedia
The Hymn to Ninkasi is at once a song of praise to Ninkasi, the Sumerian goddess of beer, and an ancient recipe for brewing (though this claim has been challenged). #History #Ur #Sumer #Mesopotamia #FertileCrescent #Beer #Babylon #Euphrates #Tigris #HistoryFact https://whe.to/ci/2-222-en/
The Hymn to Ninkasi, Goddess of Beer: A Praise Song and Ancient Beer Recipe

The Hymn to Ninkasi is at once a song of praise to Ninkasi, the Sumerian goddess of beer, and an ancient recipe for brewing (though this claim has been challenged). Written down circa 1800 BCE, the...

World History Encyclopedia
Mesopotamia is the ancient Greek name (meaning "the land between two rivers," the Tigris and Euphrates) for the region corresponding to modern-day Iraq and parts of Iran, Syria, and Turkey. #History #Ur-Nammu #Sumer #SargonOfAkkad #Mesopotamia #Hammurabi #Gilgamesh #FertileCrescent #Enheduanna #Elam #Cuneiform #Beer #Akkad #HistoryFact https://whe.to/ci/2-1600-en/
Ten Ancient Mesopotamia Facts You Need to Know: Fun Facts on the Cradle of Civilization

Mesopotamia is the ancient Greek name (meaning "the land between two rivers," the Tigris and Euphrates) for the region corresponding to modern-day Iraq and parts of Iran, Syria, and Turkey. It is considered...

World History Encyclopedia
The Sumerians were the people of southern Mesopotamia (modern-day southern Iraq) whose civilization flourished between circa 4000 and 1750 BCE. #History #Ziggurat #Uruk #Sumerians #Sumer #Mesopotamia #Hammurabi #Gutians #FertileCrescent #Archaeology #Amorite #Akkad #AkkadianMythology #Elamites #SumerianReligion #Trade #Ubaid #UrukPeriod #HistoryFact https://whe.to/ci/1-428-en/
Sumerians: Inventors of Civilization

The Sumerians were the people of southern Mesopotamia (modern-day southern Iraq) whose civilization flourished between circa 4000 and 1750 BCE. Their name comes from the region, which is frequently...

World History Encyclopedia
A 10,000-year Kurdish stalagmite reveals how climate instability shaped early communities in the eastern Fertile Crescent and influenced the rise of farming. New evidence suggests resilience, not stability, guided the path to agriculture. #Archaeology #ClimateHistory #Neolithic #FertileCrescent https://www.anthropology.net/p/stone-water-and-time-how-a-kurdish
Stone, Water, and Time: How a Kurdish Stalagmite Rewrites the Climate Story of Early Farming

A new cave record suggests that the road to agriculture in the eastern Fertile Crescent was forged through hardship, flexibility, and millennia of environmental instability.

Anthropology.net

Farming spread through migration, not local adoption, ancient DNA reveals

Around 10,000 years ago, human groups experienced one of the most important changes in the history of humanity: the shift from gathering and hunting to farming. The transition, typically known as the Neolithic Revolution, began in the Fertile Crescent in the Middle East and later spread to Europe...

More info: https://archaeologymag.com/2025/08/farming-spread-through-migration/

Follow @archaeology

#archaeology #archeology #neolithic #FertileCrescent

AO THROWBACK - The Fertile Crescent is the name given to the arc-shaped area of land that stretched across the Middle East from the northern end of the Gulf in the East to the Nile Valley in the West. https://www.ancient-origins.net/history-important-events/fertile-crescent-0010488
#AncientOrigins #ancient #history #historyfacts #historylovers #historymatters #ancienthistory #archaeology #mythology #FertileCrescent #MiddleEast #AncientHistory
A wall or a road? A remote sensing-based investigation of fortifications on Rome's eastern frontier | Antiquity | Cambridge Core

A wall or a road? A remote sensing-based investigation of fortifications on Rome's eastern frontier - Volume 97 Issue 396

Cambridge Core