Southeast Arabia (28,577 – 7,822 BCE) …

Years: 28577BCE - 7822BCE

Southeast Arabia (28,577 – 7,822 BCE) Upper Pleistocene II — Deglaciation, Coastal Productivity, and Wadi Networks

Geographic and Environmental Context

Southeast Arabia covers the southern and eastern margins of the Arabian Peninsula:
  • Eastern Yemen (Hadhramaut, eastern Aden interior, al-Mahra).

  • Southern Oman (Dhofar Highlands with the khareef monsoon, al-Wusta gravel plains, Sharqiyah Desert fringes).

  • The Empty Quarter (Rubʿ al-Khālī) margins in adjoining Saudi territory.

  • The offshore island of Socotra in the Arabian Sea.

  • Anchors: Wādī Ḥaḍramawt–Shibam–Tarim, Dhofar escarpments (Ẓafār/Al-Balīd, Mirbat), al-Mahra dunes, al-Wusta plains, Sharqiyah sands, Socotra’s Hagghier Mountains and dragon’s-blood groves.

  • As glaciers melted, sea level rose; Gulf of Aden–Arabian Sea coasts retreated inland.

  • Hadhramaut wadis deepened; Dhofar fog-forests fluctuated with monsoon strength.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Bølling–Allerød warming (14,700–12,900 BCE): lush monsoons, wadis flowed, upland belts expanded.

  • Younger Dryas (12,900–11,700 BCE): renewed aridity, wadis dried, dune advance.

  • Early Holocene (after 11,700 BCE): warm stable monsoon, reliable khareef in Dhofar.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Broad-spectrum foragers: hunting gazelle, oryx, ibex; intensified fishing and shellfish harvests during wet phases.

  • Seasonal hamlets along wadis and coastal terraces, abandoned in dry pulses.

  • Socotra: rich woodlands sustained seabirds and goats, but permanent human settlement is still unlikely.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Bladelet industries matured; ground-stone tools appeared late.

  • Fish gorges, shell scrapers, net weights.

  • Basketry and rope-making inferred from toolkits.

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Hadhramaut–Mahra wadis critical wet-phase corridors.

  • Coastal cabotage feasible during stable periods; possible short-haul to Red Sea Horn.

Cultural & Symbolic Expressions

  • Ritual feasting likely at perennial springs.

  • Petroglyphs in Dhofar/Haima desert margins may trace back to these horizons.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Flexible settlement and diet shifts buffered against Younger Dryas drought.

Transition

By 7,822 BCE, foragers had mapped wadi networks and sustained a dual economy of coast + upland.

Related Events

Filter results