Although based on strong historical, linguistic and ethnographic evidence, the conclusion that immigrant Khoekhoe pastoralists introduced the first livestock to southernmost Africa finds no convincing archaeological support. This may be for a number of reasons. Perhaps nomadic pastoralists leave no archaeological traces; or migrations are difficult to detect. Archaeology and the other disciplines may not be looking at the same thing. Or maybe the migrations date to the second millennium AD, long after the first livestock had reached southernmost Africa. It is not easy to tell: Later Stone Age animal bones, stones and pots do not broadcast the language and identity of the people who discarded them
A later Pleistocene Khoisan peopling of eastern Africa has been suggested by most researchers. The e...
A major topic in southern African archaeology, particularly in the Western Cape, concerns the differ...
Today, pastoral systems in eastern Africa are supported by elaborate social networks that minimize r...
Although based on strong historical, linguistic and ethnographic evidence, the conclusion that immig...
Archaeologists commonly cite the high mobility of pastoralists and destruction by modern development...
Abstract Background Hunter-gatherer lifestyles dom...
International audienceAlthough early food production is not as well-studied in the Horn of Africa as...
M.A. (Anthropology)Stone circle open-air settlements occur in Namibia and South Africa. Stone circle...
After several decades of research on the subject, we now know when the first livestock reached south...
Millions of Eastern Africans are pastoralists, yet the origins of mobile herding in this region are ...
This study examines mid- to late Holocene Later Stone Age archaeological residues – specifically fla...
Origin and diffusion of herding in the horn of Africa ; This article presents the current state of ...
Recent anthropological approaches to pastoral movement have stressed variability and change. In cont...
Origin(s) and processes of the transition to herding in East Africa are still unclear. The Lake Turk...
This study examines the development of morphological diversity in the human populations of eastern A...
A later Pleistocene Khoisan peopling of eastern Africa has been suggested by most researchers. The e...
A major topic in southern African archaeology, particularly in the Western Cape, concerns the differ...
Today, pastoral systems in eastern Africa are supported by elaborate social networks that minimize r...
Although based on strong historical, linguistic and ethnographic evidence, the conclusion that immig...
Archaeologists commonly cite the high mobility of pastoralists and destruction by modern development...
Abstract Background Hunter-gatherer lifestyles dom...
International audienceAlthough early food production is not as well-studied in the Horn of Africa as...
M.A. (Anthropology)Stone circle open-air settlements occur in Namibia and South Africa. Stone circle...
After several decades of research on the subject, we now know when the first livestock reached south...
Millions of Eastern Africans are pastoralists, yet the origins of mobile herding in this region are ...
This study examines mid- to late Holocene Later Stone Age archaeological residues – specifically fla...
Origin and diffusion of herding in the horn of Africa ; This article presents the current state of ...
Recent anthropological approaches to pastoral movement have stressed variability and change. In cont...
Origin(s) and processes of the transition to herding in East Africa are still unclear. The Lake Turk...
This study examines the development of morphological diversity in the human populations of eastern A...
A later Pleistocene Khoisan peopling of eastern Africa has been suggested by most researchers. The e...
A major topic in southern African archaeology, particularly in the Western Cape, concerns the differ...
Today, pastoral systems in eastern Africa are supported by elaborate social networks that minimize r...