Hi Paul -
Okay, but let's hold on for a second, before getting carried away with enthusiasm. Didn't some geologists hold that the Straits of Gibraltar were closed at that time, and that they later opened and the Mediterranean flooded? Isn't this the usual explanation provided for the pygmy elephants remains found on Crete and Cyprus?
Hi E.P.
Thanks for the information. I've tried to find scientific papers on the sea level in the Mediterraneum during the lower and midle Palaeolithic period. I have found many article attesting a middle palaeolithic hominid occupation of Sardinia but I wasn't successful on sea level articles search... I get contradictory "stories" some saying that Sardinia was connected to the Italian Peninsula during prehistoric times (without precise dates) other saying Sardinia was never connected to the continent.
Do you have references that give serious estimations about the sea level in the Mediterraneum during the lower and midle Palaeolithic period? At least about Sardinia being connected to the continent?
Thanks
Paul
Sorry Paul - I have absolutely nothing - and absolutely no way of getting anything, seriously.
At the AIA annual conference in Chicago I ran into a Greek marine geologist who had a nice impact crater on the floor of the Mediterranean, and he was looking for contact info for the impact community, but I have not heard back from him. If he ever writes, then I'll ask him if he knows any good materials.
In general, sea levels world wide rose about 300 feet (or say 100 meters) when the ice melted after the impacts at 10,900 BCE. There are the cave paintings in south France (Cours? - spelling?) but I do not know the depth of the entrance to the cave. I suppose one could take a map of floor depth and work out a first approximation, but without a good understanding of tectonic activity from data that would give you only a very rough guess.
It's strange. We now have advanced homonids around the Mediterranean at fairly early dates, and absolutely very little idea about the landscape they were moving into. Without that understanding, finding sites is by chance. And without sites, the impact record can not be pulled out.