Mundafan was a former lake in Saudi Arabia, within presently desert-like areas. It formed during the Pleistocene and Holocene, when orbitally mediated changes in climate increased monsoon precipitation in the peninsula, allowing runoff to form a lake with a maximum area of 300 square kilometres (120sqmi). It was populated by fishes and surrounded by reeds and savanna, which supported human populations.
The perennial[5] lake had an elongated shape in northwest–southeast direction[6] and reached a maximum depth of 30 metres (98ft)[7] and extent of 300 square kilometres (120sqmi) during stages of high water levels,[8] making it one of the largest former lakes of Arabia.[1] It is possible that it was not one contiguous water body, but rather several separate lakes or an extended wetland. The lake was fed by wadis coming from the Asir Mountains to the west[7] and contained freshwater,[9] although there is also evidence for brackish water.[10] Carbonate sediments formed when parts of the lake bed fell dry.[11]
The lake has left sediments made out of clays, marls and silts that form benches and mounds.[2] The sediments reach thicknesses of 24 metres (79ft).[16] The sparseness of lake deposits has led to some researchers to doubt that the waterbodies were lakes rather than wetlands, but circumstantial fossil evidence strongly implies that the waterbodies were true lakes and that the rarity of lake landforms is primarily a consequence of wind erosion, which removed these landforms after the lakes had dried up.[12]
The Mundafan lake formed in a c. 363 square kilometres (140sqmi) topographical depression formed by wind deflation. To the east rises the Tuwaiq Escarpment, a limestone of Jurassic age.[2] The lake lies within a former river bed that was blocked by dunes[7] or perhaps faulting[17] and might have overflowed northwards if its surface area exceeded 346 square kilometres (134sqmi).[1] The catchment of the Mundafan lake is comparatively large, leading to the formation of long-lasting (at least 800 years) lakes and the thickest lake deposits of Arabia.[10]
History and climatic implications
There were two high water stages, one dated to marine isotope stage 5 (MIS 5) c and a (100,000 and 80,000 years ago, respectively[18]) and the other to the early Holocene between 9,000 and 6,000 years ago.[2] The minimum surface area of the lake reached c. 100 square kilometres (39sqmi) 100,000 years ago, c. 210 square kilometres (81sqmi) 80,000 years ago and c. 58 square kilometres (22sqmi) during the Holocene;[7] the actual extent of the lake might have been larger, as lake sediments might have been removed by wind after the lake dried up.[1] During the Holocene, the maximum depth may have reached 10 metres (33ft).[5]
Increased insolation periodically caused the African monsoon to become stronger and reach farther north on the Arabian Peninsula, activating wadis and filling lakes.[7][19] These wet periods are recorded in stalagmites of Oman and Yemen and in lake sediments.[20] The increased precipitation allowed the growth of vegetation in what today is hostile desert, in turn permitting animals and humans to get established there.[9] Some researchers however advocate that wet periods took place during glacial times.[21]
Human history
The past climate and human movements through the interior Arabian Peninsula have come under scientific focus in the 2010s, with suggestions that human populations preferentially migrated during wet periods.[22] Numerous archaeological sites are linked to former lakes.[23] Research at Mundafan was initially hindered by the hostile climate conditions.[24]
There are archaeological sites of Middle Paleolithic to Neolithic age at Mundafan,[2] often near or on former shorelines[25] but also towards the lake interior, implying that the area was occupied even during low water level.[26] Humans at Mundafan were not sedentary and traded with obsidian from Yemen, farther south.[27] The site MDF-61 at the southwestern end of the lake provided an easy access to its environments and was in use for a long time, leading to the accumulation of large amounts of lithic artifacts[28] such as arrowheads[29] similar to these found in the Levant and Africa.[30] These sites demonstrate that Homo sapiens was present in Arabia, endorsing the theory of an out of Africa migration of mankind[15] which constituted its pivotal expansion event.[3]
Elmahdy, Samy; Ali, Tarig; Mohamed, Mohamed (2 August 2021). "Hydrological modeling of Ar Rub Al Khali, Arabian Peninsula: a modified remote sensing approach based on the weight of hydrological evidence". Geocarto International. 37 (21): 6251–6271. doi:10.1080/10106049.2021.1936211. S2CID236352265.
Parker, A.G.; Rose, J.I. (2008). "Climate change and human origins in southern Arabia". Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies. 38: 25–42. ISSN0308-8421. JSTOR41223935.