Tuesday, April 3, 2018

First People To Inhabit Malta Arrived 700 Years Earlier Than Previously Thought

First People To Inhabit Malta Arrived 700 Years Earlier Than Previously Thought

Just what did they use for fuel?  Surely wood and the loss of trees would have knocked out the local climate.  We should also ask where did wood come from in recent times?  Sustainability starts with forest maintenance and forest maintenance will produce 15 tons of wood fiber per year.

Even today the island has scant trees.  Yet a single generation of effort could restore forest in all non agricultural waste lands and all agricultural lands can surely be also by windrowed with productive trees to produce a canopy and an under-story as well.

This would help to recover the ground water as well and make the island hugely productive.

What this does do is establish a prime time line in which sea borne peoples arrived from all over, beginning around 3600 BC or one thousand years before the rise of the Atlantean world around 2400 BC.  I knew that had to be true but this provides the hard data that locks down real timelines.

Coastal colonization possibly arose much earlier on the mainland, but Malta needed a stable shipping economy to sustain colonization and that can be now set at 3600 BC.



First People To Inhabit Malta Arrived 700 Years Earlier Than Previously Thought 

 

http://www.ancientpages.com/2018/03/20/first-people-to-inhabit-malta-arrived-700-years-earlier-than-previously-thought/

AncientPages.com – The history of Malta has been re-written. Scientists have evidence that the first people to inhabit Malta arrived 700 years earlier than previously thought.

Analysis of ancient soils and DNA revealed that Malta’s first inhabitants came from different parts of the Mediterranean and Europe, including Africa.

Left: An altar in the Tarxien temple complex. Credit: Wikipedia. Right: Facade of the main temple of Hagar Qim. Credit: Wikipedia. Right-bottom: Xaghra Mandible. Credit: Queen’s University, Belfast
Researchers also found that a second colonization arrived in 3850BC from Sicily and lasted an extraordinary 1,500 years in Malta without a break.+

Led by Professor Caroline Malone, scientists from the Queen’s University Belfast have been working at one burial site in Malta since 1987. They have unearthed 220,000 bones, representing between 500 and 800 people dating from 3600-2350BC.+

By analyzing the ancient bones and examining the wider landscapes, it’s possible to build a detailed picture of life in prehistoric Malta.+

Results of the studies reveal that the first inhabitants were robust and healthy, with some of the best teeth that archaeologists have ever analyzed. One skull showed that sophisticated dental work had been carried out as early as 2500BC—an abscess had been lanced from the root of a tooth.
The inhabitants cared for their sick, injured and elderly and were hardy and determined, continuing with their daily tasks, despite being in chronic pain from advanced bone degradation. They survived on meat, cereals and pulses but as time went on they ate less meat and almost no fish.

The twin temples of Ä gantija on Gozo, Malta are older than Stonehenge and the Great Pyramid of Giza. Read more

Professor Malone explains: “We have made some fascinating discoveries on Malta at Queen’s University Belfast, most recently through this international project. I have been working on the Prehistory of Malta for over 30 years and the amount of detail we have extracted from these ancient skeletons is remarkable. They change the entire understanding of the first Maltese people.

“Through radiocarbon dating we have now been able to pinpoint that the first inhabitants arrived 700 years earlier than was previous thought, and we have also identified several episodes of separate colonization. Given the restricted land space of Malta, it is remarkable that the second colonization survived for 1,500 years. This sort of settlement stability is unheard of in Europe and is impressive in terms of how they were able to live on an ever degrading land for such a period of time.”


Xaghra Mandible. Credit: Queen’s University, Belfast

According to Professor Malone, “climate change fluctuations made Malta uninhabitable in some periods of prehistory. There was a substantial break of around 1,000 years between the first settlers and the next group who settled permanently on the Maltese islands and eventually built the megalithic temples.”

“While the first inhabitants were able to survive for a long period of time, they ultimately had to downscale radically when the conditions became too difficult. Their destructive farming methods had a catastrophic impact on the soil, and combined with drought, meant that eventually it all came crashing down as the islands became much too dry to sustain dense agricultural practices,” she adds.

Professor Malone also thinks there is much we could learn from the mistakes made by the first Maltese.

“The lack of water, coupled with the destruction of soil that takes centuries to form, can cause the failure of a civilization. The second group of inhabitants to Malta in 3850-2350 B.C managed their resources adequately and harnessed soil and food for over 1,500 years. It was only when climate conditions and drought became so extreme that they failed,” she explains.

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