A virtual water network of the Roman world

Publication date

2014-12-11

Authors

Dermody, BrianORCID 0000-0002-0961-2471ISNI 0000000391578934
van Beek, RensISNI 0000000117916961
Meeks, E.
Goldewijk, Kees KleinORCID 0000-0003-2714-7507ISNI 000000039530202X
Scheidel, W.
Van Der Velde, Y.
Bierkens, Marc F.P.ORCID 0000-0002-7411-6562ISNI 0000000109834798
Wassen, Martin J.ORCID 0000-0002-9735-2103ISNI 0000000392292815
Dekker, S.C.ORCID 0000-0001-7764-2464ISNI 0000000397042727

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Abstract

The Romans were perhaps the most impressive exponents of water resource management in preindustrial times with irrigation and virtual water trade facilitating unprecedented urbanization and socioeconomic stability for hundreds of years in a region of highly variable climate. To understand Roman water resource management in response to urbanization and climate variability, a Virtual Water Network of the Roman World was developed. Using this network we find that irrigation and virtual water trade increased Roman resilience to interannual climate variability. However, urbanization arising from virtual water trade likely pushed the Empire closer to the boundary of its water resources, led to an increase in import costs, and eroded its resilience to climate variability in the long term. In addition to improving our understanding of Roman water resource management, our cost-distance-based analysis illuminates how increases in import costs arising from climatic and population pressures are likely to be distributed in the future global virtual water network.

Keywords

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous), Water Science and Technology

Citation

Dermody, B J, Van Beek, R P H, Meeks, E, Klein Goldewijk, K, Scheidel, W, Van Der Velde, Y, Bierkens, M F P, Wassen, M J & Dekker, S C 2014, 'A virtual water network of the Roman world', Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, vol. 18, no. 12, pp. 5025-5040. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-18-5025-2014