Holocene morphogenesis of Alexander the Great's isthmus at Tyre in Lebanon - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Année : 2007

Holocene morphogenesis of Alexander the Great's isthmus at Tyre in Lebanon

Résumé

In 332 B.C., Alexander the Great constructed an ≈1,000-m-long causeway to seize the offshore island of Tyre. The logistics behind this engineering feat have long troubled archaeologists. Using the Holocene sedimentary record, we demonstrate that Alexander's engineers cleverly exploited a shallow proto-tombolo, or sublittoral sand spit, to breach the offshore city's defensive impregnability. We elucidate a three-phase geomorphological model for the spit's evolution. Settled since the Bronze Age, the area's geological record manifests a long history of natural and anthropogenic forcings. (i) Leeward of the island breakwater, the maximum flooding surface (e.g., drowning of the subaerial land surfaces by seawater) is dated ≈8000 B.P. Fine-grained sediments and brackish and marine-lagoonal faunas translate shallow, low-energy water bodies at this time. Shelter was afforded by Tyre's elongated sandstone reefs, which acted as a 6-km natural breakwater. (ii) By 6000 B.P., sea-level rise had reduced the dimensions of the island from 6 to 4 km. The leeward wave shadow generated by this island, allied with high sediment supply after 3000 B.P., culminated in a natural wave-dominated proto-tombolo within 1–2 m of mean sea level by the time of Alexander the Great (4th century B.C.). (iii) After 332 B.C., construction of Alexander's causeway entrained a complete anthropogenic metamorphosis of the Tyrian coastal system.

Domaines

Géomorphologie

Dates et versions

hal-01426593 , version 1 (04-01-2017)

Identifiants

Citer

Nick Marriner, Christophe Morhange, Samuel Meulé. Holocene morphogenesis of Alexander the Great's isthmus at Tyre in Lebanon. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2007, 104 (22), pp.9218--9223. ⟨10.1073/pnas.0611325104⟩. ⟨hal-01426593⟩
96 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More