Author/Authors :
Shaikh Baikloo Islam, Babak Department of History and Archaeology - Science and Research Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Chaychi Amirkhiz, Ahmad Archaeological Research Centre, Tehran , Valipour, Hamid Reza Department of Archeology - Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran
Abstract :
Prehistoric archaeological sites in North Central Iran suddenly disappeared around the end of the 4th millennium
BCE. At Tepe Sialk, near Kashan, the last cultural period, namely Sialk IV - probably established around 3400 BCE
after the last settlements of Sialk III6-7b - was abandoned approximately after 500 years. The material culture of
this period, known as Proto-Elamite period, is very different from the previous one, showing similarities with Susa
III. This period belongs to the same horizon of Uruk III in Mesopotamia and similar evidences were discovered
also at sites such as Sofalin, Shoghali, Pardis, Chaltasian, Meymanat Abad, Gholi Darvish, Maral Tepe (Uzbeki),
Ghabristan, Arisman and Hissar. With the abandonment of Sialk IV, cultures affected by Uruk in Near East were
simultaneously abandoned. This trend of abandonment documented in North Central Iran continued for about 500-
1500 years. Paleoclimate research show that this period coincides with a cold and dry period dated approximately
between 3200 and 2700 BCE. Apparently, these climatic changes threatened life more at North Central Iran than
in Mesopotamia and Khuzestan, by virtue of the presence of overflowing and permanent rivers in these territories
(Euphrates and Tigris above all), probably forcing the migration of people from North Central Iran to more favourable
areas. The present comparative study suggests that climate changes were the main reason for the cultural collapse
attested in the region.
Keywords :
North Central Iran , Sialk IV , Middle-Holocene , Late Holocene , Climate Change