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Turkmenistan, Murghab River, Bronze Age, mobile pastoralism
Abstract:
Despite the hostile climate, since the Bronze Age the populations of Southern Turkmenistan
have been able to create, through an impressive network of canals, an artificial agricultural
territory with villages and large towns. Between 2400 and 1950 BCE, the Murghab alluvial fan was
characterised by the presence of complex urban societies. This period was followed by a deep crisis
that led to the disappearance of the largest sites. At the beginning of the Iron Age (1300 BCE), the water
flow in the Murghab River decreased, resulting in a southward movement of settlements and the
abandonment of a large portion of the territory by sedentary farmers. At the same time, new groups
of mobile pastoralists began to settle in the area and started to interact with farmers. The excavations
of Togolok 1 are providing vital data on the integration between sedentary and mobile pastoralist
cultures, as well as on the birth and evolution of urbanism during the later Iron Age.