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I agree that climate changed and forced changes in behavior that led to the rise of new civilizations, but I think evidence clearly points to a pole shift every 12-13,000 year
originally posted by: Degradation33
Around the EXACT time civilizations formed the Sahara and Arabian deserts dried up in a short 200 year period.
Anyway. That's my thought of the day.
The wobble of the axis was the main catalyst for the seasonal nomadic pastoral to civilized commercial society switch.
originally posted by: Solvedit2
Can it be though that the early civilizations existed in the Sahara before it dried up, and got displaced to what is now Egypt and Iraq?
originally posted by: Byrd
originally posted by: Degradation33
a reply to: Degradation33
Addendum:
I also feel the rise of superstition was partly related to this loss of abundance at the end of the wet period. I'd imagine rain spirits became something very common to do rituals for.
It would be traumatic to have this vast area of lush abundance become uninhabitable rather quickly. No wonder they were extremely spiritual by the time of Old Egypt.
This is actually what they teach in anthropology courses at the university (or did in mine, some 30 years ago) -- as the climate changed, nomadic lifestyles were less sustainable and people gravitated toward areas of richer abundance like river valleys. Agrarian life involves villages and when you have a lot of villages interacting along a long area of waterways, civilization develops (exchange of ideas and culture, development of legal systems and writing.)