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The Mesopotamian Environments
researches..
Environmental changes in the wetlands of
Southern Iraq
based on palynological studies
Thamer Khazal Al-Ameri
&
Sahar Y. Jassim
Department of Geology, College of Science,
University of Baghdad,
Baghdad, Iraq
*e-mail: thamer_alameri@yahoo.com
Abstract
Palynological techniques are useful in reconstructing
past environments, especially when other sources of
information are lacking. We have embarked on a
palynological study of the wetlands in Southern Iraq in
an attempt to determine the nature and extent of past
plant communities and other conditions prior to the
drying of the wetland in the 1990s. Ten 1-m depth cores
were collected from selected locations in marshes and
shallow open water wetlands in Mesopotamian wetlands of
Southern Iraq. Pollen diagrams from three short cores
from the Hawizeh wetlands serve as a reference because
this site has not been drained. The palynomorphs in
these cores were Gramineae, Chenopodiaceae, Typha,
Isonandra lanceolata, Bursarea, Artocarpus, Ireantea,
Arenga, Crinum, Palmae, Navia, Tofieldia, Ipomorea,
Xyris, and Morus. Fungal spores including
Polyporisporites, Pluricellaesporites palyadosporites,
Fusiformisporites, Spegazzinites indicus, Diporisporites,
Plochmopellinites, Lycoperdon, Miliolinites,
Dryadosporites constrictus, and Trichothyrites
padapakarensis were noteworthy. Charcoal was scattered
through the cores and indicate activities associated
with human settlements. Many other forms of cuticles,
filaments, insects, algae, and foraminifera test linings
were also recorded. A second set of pollen samples were
analyzed from 160 soil samples from eight cores
collected from the wetland area which was dried during
the 1990s. These data show a mixture of pollen and
spores that could be used to evaluate past vegetation,
climatic, and ecological changes. Preliminary results
indicated that chenopodiaceous have increased while
germinate types have declined which probably reflected
desertification and a trend towards a more Aeolian
landscape during the 1990s. It is hoped that these
studies will be useful in establishing conditions of the
wetlands prior to destruction and will assist in setting
restoration goals in the future. Case studies of one
deep borehole (153 m) near Amara city for evaluating
late Quaternary history and dig of 3 m depth to evaluate
ancient desertification by wetland dryness were taken
for correlation and connection with this recent
sediment.

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Location map of the studied
sections in Southern Mesopotamia
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Successive stages of
geographic developments of past, present, and
future events in Mesopotamia during the late
Quaternary
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