by Curtis E. Larsen
University of Chicago Press, 1983
Paper: 978-0-226-46906-5 | Cloth: 978-0-226-46905-8
Library of Congress Classification GF696.B26L37 1983
Dewey Decimal Classification 304.2095365

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ABOUT THIS BOOK
According to archeological and historical records, the Bahrain Islands of the Arabian Gulf were the home of a flourishing civilization four thousant years ago. Then, as now, these islands served as an important locus of maritime trade, but they were also characterized as a land of copious artesian springs and fertile fields. Modern Bahrain, in contrast, is beset by environmental and demographic problems: the depletion of the artesian water supply, abandonment of rural agricultural lands, and rapid population growth. In this exemplary interdisciplinary study, Curtis E. Larsen combines archeological, geological, historical, and anthropological methods to reconstruct the paleoenvironmental and socioeconomic context that links Bahrain's present to its past.