The Omotic-speaking Gamo represent one of the southern Ethiopia societies that are organized in a widely recognized caste system. The history of this society and the development of its caste organization are still largely unknown. Between 2006 and 2012, we organized a collaborative project with people of the Gamo district of Boreda in an effort to combine their oral traditions and life histories with archaeological investigations regarding the history of their present-day caste system. Elders claimed nine mountain-top landscapes as the original locations for Boreda settlement. One of these settlements, Garu, is an abandoned historic village site of about 60 hectares that was occupied during the 18th-19th century CE. Archaeozoological result...
Ethiopia is believed to have the largest livestock population in Africa. An estimate indicates that ...
The goal of this paper is to identify the relationship between ceramic assemblages and household pop...
Different ethnic groups in Botswana not only have different ways of butchering canle, but the differ...
The Omotic-speaking Gamo represent one of the southern Ethiopia societies that are organized in a wi...
Few ethnoarchaeological studies have combined the production and use of groundstones and pottery as ...
International audienceThe southern Ethiopian highlands are one of the last remaining places where st...
The goal of this research is to provide an understanding of ceramic assemblage variation in the inte...
The Pre-Aksumite period in Eastern Tigrai, northern Ethiopia witnessed great social and economic cha...
Although plastic and metal vessels offer significant advantages and have almost universally supplant...
The dual model of foragers versus producers is increasingly perceived as inadequate for understandin...
The aim of this paper is to describe two craft activities, traditional hide working and pottery, obs...
The significance of flaked stone tool variation has been a source of great archaeological debate for...
The use of a pottery vessel leaves markers on the ceramic wall that can inform archaeologists how th...
Grinding stones have been in use by humans since the African Middle Stone Age and for food processin...
Over three field seasons between 2007 and 2012, we excavated three caves—Mota, Tuwatey, and Gulo—sit...
Ethiopia is believed to have the largest livestock population in Africa. An estimate indicates that ...
The goal of this paper is to identify the relationship between ceramic assemblages and household pop...
Different ethnic groups in Botswana not only have different ways of butchering canle, but the differ...
The Omotic-speaking Gamo represent one of the southern Ethiopia societies that are organized in a wi...
Few ethnoarchaeological studies have combined the production and use of groundstones and pottery as ...
International audienceThe southern Ethiopian highlands are one of the last remaining places where st...
The goal of this research is to provide an understanding of ceramic assemblage variation in the inte...
The Pre-Aksumite period in Eastern Tigrai, northern Ethiopia witnessed great social and economic cha...
Although plastic and metal vessels offer significant advantages and have almost universally supplant...
The dual model of foragers versus producers is increasingly perceived as inadequate for understandin...
The aim of this paper is to describe two craft activities, traditional hide working and pottery, obs...
The significance of flaked stone tool variation has been a source of great archaeological debate for...
The use of a pottery vessel leaves markers on the ceramic wall that can inform archaeologists how th...
Grinding stones have been in use by humans since the African Middle Stone Age and for food processin...
Over three field seasons between 2007 and 2012, we excavated three caves—Mota, Tuwatey, and Gulo—sit...
Ethiopia is believed to have the largest livestock population in Africa. An estimate indicates that ...
The goal of this paper is to identify the relationship between ceramic assemblages and household pop...
Different ethnic groups in Botswana not only have different ways of butchering canle, but the differ...