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A hydrologic and archeologic study of climate change in Al Ain,United Arab Emirates
Affiliation:1. Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A8, Canada;2. Department of Animal Nutrition, The University of Agriculture Peshawar, 25130, Peshawar, Pakistan;3. College of Life Science and Engineering, Foshan University, Guangdong, China
Abstract:Aridity trends established for Al Ain, United Arab Emirates, for the past 4500 years correlate with the trends of increased well depths and declining groundwater levels. Depth of wells found at archeologic sites at Hili near Al Ain were correlated to groundwater levels. Trends of declining groundwater levels were related to trends of increasing aridity (climate change). The increasing aridity had a pronounced affect on man's development in Al Ain area as well. For example, nonirrigation farming could not be successfully sustained at the end of the Bronze Age. This thwarted the economic development until the falaj (a water conveyance structure) was introduced in the Iron Age.The aridity trends in Al Ain correspond to contemporaneous aridity trends noted in Mesopotamia and the Dead Sea area, as well as the Middle East, Mediterranean, and northern Africa, in general. Other global climatic changes that are contemporaneous with climate change at Al Ain have been noted. The increased aridity (desertification) trends at Al Ain are contemporaneous with increased atmospheric CO2 trends as reported by Indermuhle et al. [Nature (398) 121].
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