Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T16:38:52.479Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

9 - Persistence or Pastoralism: The Challenges of Studying Hunter-Gatherer Resilience in Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2018

Daniel H. Temple
Affiliation:
George Mason University, Virginia
Christopher M. Stojanowski
Affiliation:
Arizona State University
Get access

Summary

This chapter considers evidence for a dietary transition during the Middle Holocene climatic optimum in the central Sahara. Using data from the site of Gobero (Niger), data on dental health are compared between two occupation phases to determine if a dietary transition had occurred. These sites were associated with a once vibrant lake basin that was home to human populations from around 10,000 to 4,000 years ago, with an occupational hiatus coincident with the 8.2kya. Results indicate limited evidence for a change in dental disease patterns through time, which suggests that any dietary transition that occurred was relatively minor and not a complete restructuring of human lifeways. Comparing these data to a broader sample of pastoralist populations suggests the data from Gobero lack the signatures of the adoption of pastoralism and instead reflect the continuation of a hunter-gatherer lifeway during the Early and Middle Holocene of the central Sahara. Changes in mortuary practices and broader site level organization may indicate the emergence of incipient social complexity in the form of an ownership society.
Type
Chapter
Information
Hunter-Gatherer Adaptation and Resilience
A Bioarchaeological Perspective
, pp. 193 - 226
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Arioti, M. and Oxby, C. (1997). From hunter-fisher-gathering to herder-hunter-fisher-gathering in prehistoric times (Saharo-Sudanese region). Nomadic Peoples, 1, 98119.Google Scholar
Ashley, C. Z. (2010). Towards a socialised archaeology of ceramics in Great Lakes Africa. African Archaeological Review, 27, 135163.Google Scholar
Binford, L. R. (2001). Constructing Frames of Reference: An Analytical Method for Archaeological Theory Building Using Ethnographic and Environmental Data Sets. Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Blench, R. and MacDonald, K. C. (2000). The Origins and Development of African Livestock: Archaeology, Genetics, Linguistics, and Ethnography. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Brass, M. (2007). Reconsidering the emergence of social complexity in early Saharan pastoral societies, 5000–2500 B.C. Sahara, 18, 722.Google Scholar
Brothwell, D. R. (1981). Digging Up Bones. 3rd edn. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Buikstra, J. E. and Ubelaker, D. H. (1984) Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains. Fayetteville, AR: Arkansas Archeological Survey.Google Scholar
Cameron, M. E. and Pfeiffer, S. (2014). Long bone cross-sectional geometric properties of later Stone Age foragers and herder-foragers. South African Journal of Science, 110, 111.Google Scholar
Campbell, S. K. and Butler, V. L. (2010). Archaeological evidence for resilience of Pacific Northwest salmon populations and the socioecological system over the last ~7,500 years. Ecology and Society, 15, 17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, P. L. and Clark, J. D. (1976). Adrar Bous and African cattle. In Abebe, B., Chavaillon, J., and Sutton, J. E. G., eds., Proceedings of the Pan-African Congress of Prehistory and Quaternary Studies. Addis Ababa: Provisional Military Government of Socialist Ethiopia Ministry of Culture, pp. 487493.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D., Williams, M. A. J., and Smith, A. B. (1973). The geomorphology and archeology of Adrar Bous, central Sahara: A preliminary report. Quaternaria, 17, 245297.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D., Agrilla, E. J., Crader, D. C., et al. (2008a). Adrar Bous. Archaeology of a Central Saharan Granitic Ring Complex in Niger. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa.Google Scholar
Clark, J. D., Carter, P. L., Gifford-Gonzalez, D., and Smith, A. B. (2008b). The Adrar Bous cow and African cattle. In Clark, J. D. and Gifford-Gonzalez, D., eds., Adrar Bous: Archaeology of a Central Saharan Granitic Ring Complex in Niger. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, pp. 355368.Google Scholar
Crader, D. C. (2008). Technology and classification of the grinding equipment. In Clark, J. D. and Gifford-Gonzalez, D., eds., Adrar Bous: Archaeology of a Central Saharan Granitic Ring Complex in Niger. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, pp. 291311.Google Scholar
Cribb, R. (1991). Nomads in Archaeology. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Crowther, A., Prendergast, M. E., Fuller, D. Q., and Boivin, N. (2017). Subsistence mosaics, forager–farmer interactions, and the transition to food production in eastern African. Quaternary International. DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2017.01.014.Google Scholar
Dale, D., Marshall, F., and Pilgram, T. (2004). Delayed-return hunter-gatherers in Africa? Historic perspectives from the Okiek and archaeological perspectives from the Kansyore. In Crothers, G. M., ed., Hunters and Gatherers in Theory and Archaeology. Cardondale, IL: Southern Illinois University, pp. 340375.Google Scholar
Denbow, J. R. (1984). Prehistoric herders and foragers of the Kalahari: The evidence for 1500 years of interaction. In Schirer, C., ed., Past and Present in Hunter Gatherer Studies. Orlando, FL: Academic Press, pp. 175193.Google Scholar
di Lernia, S. (1999). The Uan Afuda Cave: Hunter-Gatherer Societies of Central Sahara. Rome: All’Insegna del Giglio.Google Scholar
di Lernia, S. (2006). Building monuments, creating identity: Cattle cult as a social response to rapid environmental changes in the Holocene Sahara. Quaternary International, 151, 5062.Google Scholar
di Lernia, S. (2013). Places, monuments, and landscape: Evidence from the Holocene central Sahara. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa, 48, 173192.Google Scholar
di Lernia, S., Tafuri, M. A., Gallinaro, M., et al. (2013). “Inside the African cattle complex”: animal burials in the Holocene Central Sahara. PLoS One 8(2), e56879.Google Scholar
Drake, N. A., Blench, R. M., Armitage, S. J., Bristow, C. S., and White, K. H. (2011). Ancient watercourses and biogeography of the Sahara explain the peopling of the desert. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 108, 458462.Google Scholar
Dunne, J., Evershed, R. P., Salque, M., et al. (2012). First dairying in green Saharan African in the fifth millennium BC, Nature, 486, 390394.Google Scholar
Dyson-Hudson, R. and Dyson-Hudson, N. (1980). Nomadic pastoralism. Annual Review of Anthropology, 9, 1561.Google Scholar
Échallier, J. -C. and Roset, J.- P. (1986). La céramique des gisements de Tagalagal et de l’Adrar Bous 10 (Air, République du Niger). Cahiers des Sciences Humaines, 22, 151158.Google Scholar
Eidelberg, P. G. (1986). Hunters, horticulturalists, herders and “developmental inertia”: Resistance to technological change in South Africa and North America. South African Historical Journal, 18, 99124.Google Scholar
Eng, J. T. (2007). Nomadic Pastoralism and the Chinese Empire: A Bioarchaeological Study of China’s Northern Frontier. PhD dissertation, University of California.Google Scholar
Eng, J. T. (2016). A bioarchaeological study of osteoarthritis among populations of northern China and Mongolia during the Bronze Age to Iron Age transition to nomadic pastoralism. Quaternary International, 405B, 172185.Google Scholar
Eshed, V., Gopher, A., and Hershkovitz, I. (2006). Tooth wear and dental pathology at the advent of agriculture: New evidence from the Levant. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 130, 145159.Google Scholar
Falseit, R. K. (2015). Beyond Collapse: Archaeological Perspectives on Resilience, Revitalization, and Transformation in Complex Societies. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press.Google Scholar
Fauvelle-Aymar, F.-X. (2004). Between the first herders and the last herders: Are the Khoekhoe descendants of the Neolithic “hunters-with-sheep”? Before Farming, 4, 111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flensborg, G. (2016). Health and disease of hunter-gatherer groups from the eastern Pampa–Patagonia transition (Argentina) during the Late Holocene. Anthropological Science, 124, 2944.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frahm, E., Goldstein, S. T., and Tryon, C. A. (2017). Late Holocene forager-fisher and pastoralist interactions along the Lake Victoria shores, Kenya: Perspectives from portable XRF of obsidian artifacts. Journal of Archaeological Science, 11, 717742.Google Scholar
Funicane, B., Manning, K., and Touré, M. (2008). Late Stone Age subsistence in the Tilemsi Valley, Mali: Stable isotope analysis of human and animal remains from the site of Karkarichinkat Nord (KN05) and Karkarichinkat Sud (KS05). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 27, 8292.Google Scholar
Galaty, J. G. (1986). East African hunters and pastoralists in a regional perspective: An “ethnoarchaeological” approach. Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika, 7, 105131.Google Scholar
Garcea, E. A. A. (2004). An alternative way towards food production: The perspective from the Libyan Sahara. Journal of World Prehistory, 18, 107154.Google Scholar
Garcea, E. A. A. (2008). The ceramics from Adrar Bous and surrounding areas. In Clark, J. D. and Gifford-Gonzalez, D., eds., Adrar Bous: Archaeology of a Central Saharan Granitic Ring Complex in Niger. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, pp. 245298.Google Scholar
Garcea, E. A. A. (2013a). The archaeological significance of Gobero. In Garcea, E. A. A., ed., Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 518.Google Scholar
Garcea, E. A. A. (2013b). Regional overview during the time frame of the Gobero occupation. In Garcea, E. A. A., ed., Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 251270.Google Scholar
Garcea, E. A. A. (2013c). Manufacturing technology of the ceramic assemblages. In Garcea, E. A. A., ed., Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 209240.Google Scholar
Garcea, E. A. A., ed. (2013d). Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag.Google Scholar
Garcea, E. A. A. (2013e). Gobero: The secular and sacred place. In Garcea, E. A. A., ed., Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 271293.Google Scholar
Gasse, F. (2000). Hydrological changes in the African tropics since the Last Glacial Maximum. Quaternary Science Reviews, 19, 189211.Google Scholar
Gifford-Gonzalez, D. (2003). The fauna from Ele Bor: Evidence for the persistence of foragers into the later Holocene of arid north Kenya. African Archaeological Review, 20, 81119.Google Scholar
Gifford-Gonzalez, D. (2005). Pastoralism and its consequences. In Stahl, A. B., ed., African Archaeology: A Critical Introduction. Malden, MA: Blackwell, pp. 187224.Google Scholar
Gifford-Gonzalez, D. (2017). “Animal disease challenges” fifteen years later: The hypothesis in light of new data. Quaternary International, 436, 283293.Google Scholar
Gifford-Gonzalez, D. and Parham, J. F. (2008). The fauna from Adrar Bous and surrounding areas. In Clark, J. D. and Gifford-Gonzalez, D., eds., Adrar Bous. Archaeology of a Central Saharan Granitic Ring Complex in Niger. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, pp. 313354.Google Scholar
Giraudi, C. (2013). Late Upper Pleistocene and Holocene stratigraphy of the palaeolakes in the Gobero basin. In Garcea, E. A. A., ed., Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 6781.Google Scholar
Giraudi, C. and Mercuri, A. M. (2013). Early to Middle Holocene environmental variations in the Gobero basin. In Garcea, E. A. A., ed., Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 114126.Google Scholar
Grillo, K. M. (2014). Pastoralism and pottery use: An ethnoarchaeological study in Samburu, Kenya. African Archaeological Review, 31, 105130.Google Scholar
Guibert, P., Schvoerer, M., Etcheverry, M. P., Szepertyski, B., and Ney, C. (1994). IXth millenium B.C. ceramics from Niger: Detection of a U-series disequilibrium and TL dating. Quaternary Science Reviews, 13, 555561.Google Scholar
Guo, Z., Petit-Maire, N., and Kröpelin, S. (2000). Holocene non-orbital climatic events in present-day arid areas of northern Africa and China. Global and Planetary Change, 26, 97103.Google Scholar
Hammer, E. and Arbuckle, B. (2016). 10,000 years of pastoralism in Anatolia: A review of evidence for variability in pastoral lifeways. Nomadic Peoples, 21, 214267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haour, A. C. (2003). One hundred years of archaeology in Niger. Journal of World Prehistory, 17, 181234.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hassan, F. A. (1997). Holocene paleoclimates of Africa. African Archaeological Review, 14, 213230.Google Scholar
Hassan, F. A. (2002). Paleoclimate, food and culture change in Africa: An overview. In Hassan, F. A., ed., Droughts, Food and Culture: Ecological Change and Food Security in Africa’s Later Prehistory. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 1126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hegmon, M. E., Peeples, M. A., Kinzig, A. P., et al. (2008). Social transformation and its human costs in the Prehispanic U.S. Southwest. American Anthropologist, 110, 313324.Google Scholar
Hill, E. C., Durband, A. C., and Walshe, K. (2016). Risk minimization and a Late Holocene increase in mobility at Roonka Flat, South Australia: An analysis of lower limb diaphyseal shape. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 161, 94103.Google Scholar
Hillson, S. (2001). Recording dental caries in archaeological human remains. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 11, 249289.Google Scholar
Holl, A. F. C. (1998) Livestock, husbandry, pastoralisms, and territoriality: The West African record. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 17, 143165.Google Scholar
Honeychurch, W. (2014). Alternative complexities: The archaeology of pastoral nomadic states. Journal of Archaeological Research, 22, 277326.Google Scholar
Honeychurch, W. and Makarewicz, C. A. (2016). The archaeology of pastoral nomadism. Annual Review of Anthropology, 45, 341359.Google Scholar
Hugot, H.-J. (1962). Premier aperçu sur la préhistoire du Ténéré du Tefassasset. In Hugot, H., ed., Missions Berliet Ténéré-Tchad. Paris: Arts et Métiers Graphiques, pp. 149178.Google Scholar
Iannotti, L. and Lesorogol, C. (2014). Animal milk sustains micronutrient nutrition and child anthropometry among pastoralists in Samburu, Kenya. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 155, 6676.Google Scholar
Ikeya, K. (2005). Socioeconomic relationships between herders and hunters: A comparison of the Kalahari Desert and northeastern Siberia. Senri Ethnological Studies, 69, 3144.Google Scholar
Ingold, T. (1980). Hunters, Pastoralists and Ranchers: Reindeer Economies and Their Transformation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ingold, T. (1987). Hunting, sacrifice and the domestication of animals. In Ingold, T., ed., The Appropriation of Nature: Essays on Human Ecology and Social Relations. Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Press, pp. 243276.Google Scholar
Ingold, T. (2000). From trust to domination. An alternative history of human–animal relations. In Ingold, T., ed., Perceptions of the Environment: Essays on Livelihood, Dwelling and Skill. London: Routledge, pp. 6176.Google Scholar
Ingold, T. (2015). From the master’s point of view: Hunting is sacrifice. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 21, 2427.Google Scholar
Jesse, F., Keding, B., Lenssen-Erz, T., and Pollath, N. (2013). “I hope your cattle are well”: Archaeological evidence for early cattle-centred behaviour in the eastern Sahara of Sudan and Chad. In Bollig, M., Schnegg, M., and Wotzka, H.-P., eds., Pastoralism in Africa: Past, Present and Future. New York, NY: Berghahn. pp. 66103.Google Scholar
Johnson, A. L. (2014). Exploring adaptive variation among hunter-gatherers with Binford’s frames of reference. Journal of Archaeological Research, 22, 142.Google Scholar
Joubert, G. and Vaufrey, R. (1941–1946). Le néolithique de Ténéré. L’Anthropologie, 50, 325330.Google Scholar
Jousse, H. (2003). Impact des Variations Environmentales sur la Structure des Communautés Mammaliennes et l’Anthropisation des Milieu: Exemple des Faunes Holocènes du Sahara Occidental. Lyon: Laboratoires de Géologie de Lyon.Google Scholar
Jousse, H. (2006). What is the impact of Holocene climatic changes on human societies? Analysis of West African Neolithic populations dietary customs. Quaternary International, 151, 6373.Google Scholar
Jousse, H., Obermaier, H., Raimbault, M., and Peters, J. (2008). Late Holocene economic specialisation through aquatic resource exploitation in the Méma, Mali. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 18, 549572.Google Scholar
Kenrick, J. and Lewis, J. (2001). Discrimination against the forest peoples [“Pygmies”] of Central Africa. In Chakma, S. and Jensen, M., eds., Racism against Indigenous Peoples. Copenhagen: International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs, pp. 312325.Google Scholar
Kent, S. (1996). Cultural Diversity among Twentieth Century Foragers: An African Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Khazanov, A. (1994). Nomads and the Outside World. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Kuper, R. and Kröpelin, S. (2006). Climate-controlled Holocene occupation in the Sahara: Motor of Africa’s evolution. Science, 313, 803807.Google Scholar
Kuper, R. and Riemer, H. (2013). Herders before pastoralism: Prehistoric prelude in the eastern Sahara. In Bollig, M., Schnegg, M., and Wotzka, H.-P., eds., Pastoralism in Africa: Past, Present and Future. New York, NY: Berghahn, pp. 3165.Google Scholar
Kusimba, C. M. and Kusimba, S. B. (2005). Mosaics and interactions: East Africa. 2000 b.p. to the present. In Stahl, A. B., ed., African Archaeology: A Critical Introduction. Malden, MA: Blackwell, pp. 392419.Google Scholar
Kusimba, S. B. (2003). African Foragers: Environment, Technology, Interactions. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press.Google Scholar
Kusimba, S. B. (2005). What is a hunter-gatherer? Variation in the archaeological record of eastern and southern Africa. Journal of Archaeological Research, 13, 337366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, R. B. (1979). The !Kung San: Men, Women, and Work in a Foraging Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lee, R. B. (1984). The Dobe !Kung. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.Google Scholar
Lieverse, A. R. (1999). Diet and aetiology of dental calculus. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 9, 219232.Google Scholar
Lieverse, A. R., Link, D. W., Bazaliiskiy, V. I., Goriunova, O. I., and Weber, A. W. (2007). Dental health indicators of hunter-gatherer adaptation and cultural change in Siberia’s Cis-Baikal. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 134, 323339.Google Scholar
Linseele, V. (2010). Did specialized pastoralism develop differently in Africa than in the Near East? An example from the West African Sahel. Journal of World Prehistory, 23, 4377.Google Scholar
Linseele, V. (2017). The exploitation of aquatic resources in Holocene West Africa. In Albarella, U., Rizzetto, M., Russ, H., Vickers, K., and Viner-Daniels, S., eds., The Oxford Handbook of Zooarchaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 439451.Google Scholar
Little, M. A. (1989). Human biology of African pastoralists. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 32(S10), 215247.Google Scholar
Lukacs, J. R. (1989). Dental paleopathology: Methods for reconstructing dietary patterns: In Isçan, M. Y. and Kennedy, K. A. R., eds., Reconstruction of Life from the Skeleton. New York, NY: Alan R. Liss, pp. 261286.Google Scholar
Luna, L. H. and Aranda, C. M. (2014). Trends in oral pathology of hunter-gatherers from Western Pampas, Argentina. Anthropological Science, 122, 5567.Google Scholar
MacDonald, K. C. (1997). “Korounkorokalé” revisited: The Pays Mande and the West African microlithic technocomplex. African Archaeological Review, 14, 161200.Google Scholar
MacDonald, K. C. (1999). Invisible pastoralists: An inquiry into the origins of nomadic pastoralism in the West African Sahel. In Gosden, C. and Hather, J., eds., The Prehistory of Food: Appetites for Change. London: Routledge, pp. 333349.Google Scholar
MacDonald, K. C. and Van Neer, W. (1994). Specialised fishing peoples in the Later Holocene of the Méma Region (Mali). In Van Neer, W., ed., Fish Exploitation in the Past: Proceedings of the 7th Meeting of the ICAZ Fish Remains Working Group. Terverun: Annales du Musée Royal de l’Afrique Centrale, Sciences Zoologiques, pp. 243251.Google Scholar
Machicek, M. L. (2011). Reconstructing Diet, Health and Activity Patterns in Early Nomadic Pastoralist Communities of Inner Asia. PhD dissertation, University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Machicek, M. L. and Zubova, A. V. (2012). Dental wear patterns and subsistence activities in early nomadic pastoralist communities of the Central Asian steppes. Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia, 40, 149157.Google Scholar
Manning, K. M. (2008). Mobility strategies and their social and economic implications for Late Stone Age Sahelian pastoral groups: A view from the Lower Tilemsi Valley, eastern Mali. Archaeological Review from Cambridge, 23, 125145.Google Scholar
Manning, K. M. (2011). The first herders of the West African Sahel: Inter-site comparative analysis of zooarchaeological data from the Lower Tilemsi Valley, Mali. In Jousse, H. and Lesur, H., eds., People and Animals in Holocene Africa: Recent Advances in Archaeozoology. Frankfurt: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 7585.Google Scholar
Manning, K. M. and Timpson, A. (2014). The demographic response to Holocene climate change in the Sahara. Quaternary Science Reviews, 101, 2835.Google Scholar
Marchi, D., Sparacello, V., and Shaw, C. N. (2011). Mobility and lower limb robusticity of a pastoralist Neolithic population from North-Western Italy. In Pinhasi, R. and Stock, J. T., eds., Human Bioarchaeology of the Transition to Agriculture. London: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 317346.Google Scholar
Marlowe, F. (2010). The Hadza: Hunter-Gatherers of Tanzania. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Marshall, F. (1990). Origins of specialized pastoral production in East Africa. American Anthropologist, 92, 873894.Google Scholar
Marshall, F. and Hildebrand, E. (2002). Cattle before crops: The beginnings of food production in Africa. Journal of World Prehistory, 16, 99144.Google Scholar
Marshall, F. and Stewart, K. (1994). Hunting, fishing and herding pastoralists of western Kenya: The fauna from Gogo Falls. Archaeozoologia, 7, 727.Google Scholar
Masemula, N. (2015). An Investigation of Skeletons from Type-R Settlements along the Riet and Orange rivers, South Africa, using Stable Isotope Analysis. Masters thesis, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Mauny, R. (1949). Etat actuel de nos connaissances sur la préhistoire de la colonie du Niger. Bulletin de l’IFAN, 11, 141158.Google Scholar
McIntosh, R. J. (1993). The pulse model: Genesis and accommodation of specialization in the Middle Niger. Journal of African History, 34, 181220.Google Scholar
Miller, A. V. (2013). Social Organization and Interaction in Bronze Age Eurasia: A Bioarchaeological and Statistical Approach to the Study of Communities. PhD dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo.Google Scholar
Miller, A. V., Usmanova, E., Logvin, V., et al. (2014). Dental health, diet, and social transformations in the Bronze Age: Comparative analysis of pastoral populations in northern Kazakhstan. Quaternary International, 348, 130146.Google Scholar
Murphy, E. M., Schulting, R., Beer, N., et al. (2013). Iron Age pastoral nomadism and agriculture in the eastern Eurasian steppe: Implications from dental palaeopathology and stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes. Journal of Archaeological Science, 40, 25472560.Google Scholar
Murphy, M. A. (2011). A meal on the hoof or wealth in the krall? Stable isotopes at Kgaswe and Taukome in eastern Botswana. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 21, 591601.Google Scholar
Mutundu, K. K. (2005). Domestic stock age profiles and herd management practices: Ethnoarchaeological implications from Maasai settlements in East Africa. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa, 45, 623.Google Scholar
Mutundu, K. K. (2010). An ethnoarchaeological framework for the identification and distinction of Late Holocene archaeological sites in East Africa. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa, 45, 623.Google Scholar
Paris, F. (1984). La Région d’In Gall: Tegidda N Tesemt (Niger). Programme archéologique d’urgence 1977–1981, III. Les sépultures du néolithique final à l’Islam. Niamey: Institut de Recherches en Sciences Humaines.Google Scholar
Paris, F. (1990). Les sépultures monumentals d’Iwelen (Niger). Journal des Africanistes, 60, 4775.Google Scholar
Paris, F. (1992). Chin Tafidet, village néolithique. Journal des Africanistes, 62, 3353.Google Scholar
Paris, F. (1996). Les Sépultures du Sahara Nigérien du Néolithique à l’Islamisation: Coutumes Funéraires, Chronologie, Civilisations. Paris: ORSTROM.Google Scholar
Paris, F. (1997). Les inhumations de Bos au Sahara méridional au Néolithique. Archaeozoologia, 9, 113122.Google Scholar
Paris, F. (1999). Vallée de l’Azawagh (Sahara du Niger). Saint-Maur: Ètudes Nigériennes 57.Google Scholar
Paris, F. (2000). African livestock remains from Saharan mortuary contexts. In Blench, R. M. and Macdonald, K. C., eds., The Origins and Development of African Livestock: Archaeology, Genetics, Linguistics, and Ethnography. London: University College London Press, pp. 111126.Google Scholar
Petit-Maire, N. (1986). Palaeoclimates in the Sahara of Mali: A multidisciplinary study. Episodes, 9, 716.Google Scholar
Petit-Maire, N. (1989). Interglacial environments in the presently hyperarid Sahara: Paleoclimatic implications. In Leinen, M. and Sarnthein, M., eds., Paleoclimatology and Paleometeorology: Modern and Past Patterns of Global Atmospheric Transport. Dordecht: Kluwer Academic Publishing, pp. 637661.Google Scholar
Petit-Maire, N., Page, N., and Marchand, J. (1993). The Sahara in the Holocene. Map 1r5.000.000. Paris: UNESCO-CGMW.Google Scholar
Prendergast, M. E. (2010). Kansyore fisher-foragers and transitions to food production in East Africa: The view from Wadh Lang’o, Nyanza Province, western Kenya. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa, 45, 83111.Google Scholar
Prendergast, M. E. (2011). Hunters and herders at the periphery: The spread of herding in eastern Africa. In Jouse, H. and Lesur, J., eds., People and Animals in Holocene Africa: Recent Advances in Archaeozoology. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 4358.Google Scholar
Prendergast, M. E. and Mutundu, K. K. (2010). Late Holocene zooarchaeology in East Africa: Ethnographic analogues and interpretive challenges. Documenta Archaeobiologiae, 7, 203232.Google Scholar
Quéchon, G. and Roset, J.-P. (1974). Prospection archéologique du massif de Termit (Niger). Cahiers ORSTOM. Série Sciences Humaines, 11, 85104.Google Scholar
Redman, C. L. and Kinzig, A. P. (2003). Resilience of past landscapes: Resilience theory, society, and the Longue Durée. Conservation Ecology, 7, 14.Google Scholar
Reygasse, M. (1934). Le Ténéréen: Observations sur un faciès nouveau di Néolithique des confins algérosoudanais. In Compte Rendu de la Session du X Congrès Préhistorique de France, Périgueux, pp. 577–584.Google Scholar
Roset, J.-P. (1987). Paleoclimatic and cultural conditions of Neolithic development in the Early Holocene of northern Niger (Air and Tenere). In Close, A. E., ed., Prehistory of Arid North Africa. Dallas, TX: Southern Methodist University Press, pp. 189210.Google Scholar
Roset, J.-P., de Broin, J., Faure, M., et al. (1990). La faune de Tin Ouaffadene et d’Adrar Bous 10, deux gisements archéologiques de l’Holocène ancien au Niger nord-oriental. Géodynamique, 5, 6789.Google Scholar
Russell, T. and Lander, F. (2015). “What is consumed is wasted”. From foraging to herding in the southern African later Stone Age. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa, 50, 267317.Google Scholar
Sadler, K., Kerven, C., Calo, M., Manske, M., and Catley, A. (2010). The fat and the lean: Review of production and use of milk by pastoralists. Pastoralism, 1, 291324.Google Scholar
Sadr, K. (1991). The Development of Nomadism in Ancient Northeast Africa. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Sadr, K. (1998). The first herders at the Cape of Good Hope. African Archaeological Review, 15, 101132.Google Scholar
Sadr, K. (2005). From foraging to herding: The west coast of South Africa in the first millennium AD. Human Evolution, 20, 217230.Google Scholar
Sadr, K. (2013). A short history of early herding in southern Africa. In Bollig, M., Schnegg, M., and Wotzka, H.-P., eds., Pastoralism in Africa: Past, Present and Futures. New York, NY: Berghahn, pp. 171197.Google Scholar
Salzman, P. C. (2002). Pastoral nomads: some general observations based on research in Iran. Journal of Anthropological Research, 58, 245264.Google Scholar
Sampson, C. G. (2010). Chronology and dynamics of later Stone Age herders in the Upper Seacow River Valley, South Africa. Journal of Arid Environments, 74, 842848.Google Scholar
Schirer, C. (1992). The archaeological identity of hunters and herders at the Cape over the last 2000 years: A critique. South African Archaeological Bulletin, 476264.Google Scholar
Schmidt, C. S., Beach, J. J., McKinley, J. I., and Eng, J. T. (2016). Distinguishing dietary indicators of pastoralists and agriculturalists via dental microwear texture analysis. Surface Topography: Metrology and Properties, 4, 014008Google Scholar
Scott, E. C. (1979). Dental wear scoring technique. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 51, 213218.Google Scholar
Sealy, J. (2010). Isotopic evidence for the antiquity of cattle-based pastoralism in southernmost Africa. Journal of African Archaeology, 8, 6581.Google Scholar
Sereno, P. C., Garcea, E. A. A., Jousse, H., et al. (2008). Lakeside cemeteries in the Sahara: 5000 years of Holocene population and environmental change. PLoS ONE, 3, 122.Google Scholar
Shahack-Gross, R., Marshall, F., and Weiner, S. (2003). Geoarchaeology of pastoral sites: The identification of livestock enclosures in abandoned Maasai settlements. Journal of Archaeological Science, 30, 439459.Google Scholar
Shahack-Gross, R., Simons, A., and Ambrose, S. H. (2008). Identification of pastoral sites using stable nitrogen and carbon isotopes from bulk sediment samples: A case study in modern and archaeological pastoral settlements in Kenya. Journal of Archaeological Science, 35, 983990.Google Scholar
Skinner, M. F., Rodrigues, A. T., and Byra, C. (2014). Developing a pig model for crypt fenestration-induced localized hypoplastic enamel defects in humans. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 154, 239250.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1973). The Adrar n’Kiffi industry. Quaternaria, 17, 272281.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1974). Adrar Bous and Karkarichinkat: Examples of Post-Palaeolithic Human Adaptation in the Saharan and Sahel Zones of West Africa. PhD dissertation, University of California.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1976). A microlithic industry from Adrar Bous, Ténéré Desert, Niger. In Abebe, B., Chavaillon, J., and Sutton, J. E. G., eds., Proceedings of the 7th PanAfrican Congress of Prehistory and Quaternary Studies. Addis Ababa: Ministry of Culture, pp. 181196.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1986a). Competition, conflict and clientship: Khoi and San relationships in the Western Cape. Goodwin Series, 5, 3641.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1986b). Cattle domestication in North Africa. African Archaeological Review, 4, 197203.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1990). On becoming herders: Khoikhoi and San ethnicity in southern Africa. African Studies, 49, 5173.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1992). Origins and spread of pastoralism in Africa. Annual Review of Anthropology, 21, 125141.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1998a). Keeping people on the periphery: The ideology of social hierarchies between hunters and herders. Journal of African Archaeology, 17, 201215.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (1998b). Early domestic stock in southern Africa: A commentary. African Archaeological Review, 15, 151156.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (2002). The pastoral landscape in Saharan prehistory. In Lenssen-Erz, T., Tegtmeier, U., and Kröpelin, S., eds., Tides of the Desert: Contributions to the Archaeology and Environmental History of Africa in Honour of Rudolph KuperCologne: Heinrich-Barth Institut, University of Cologne, pp. 447457.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (2005a). African Herders: Emergence of Pastoral Traditions. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (2005b). Desert solitude: The evolution of ideologies among pastoralists and hunter-gatherers in arid North Africa. In Veth, P., Smith, M., and Hiscock, P., eds., Desert Peoples: Archaeological Perspectives. New York, NY: Blackwell Publishing, pp. 261275.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (2008a). The Kiffian. In Clark, J. D. and Gifford-Gonzalez, D., eds., Adrar Bous: Archaeology of a Central Saharan Granitic Ring Complex in Niger. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, pp. 179200.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (2008b). The Tenerian. In Clark, J. D. and Gifford-Gonzalez, D., eds., Adrar Bous: Archaeology of a Central Saharan Granitic Ring Complex in Niger. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa, pp. 201244.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (2014). The Origins of Herding in Southern Africa. Saarbrücken: Lambert Academic Publishing.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B. (2016). Why would southern African hunters be reluctant food producers? Hunter Gatherer Research, 2, 415435.Google Scholar
Smith, A. B., Sadr, K., Gribble, J., and Yates, R. (1991). Excavations in the south-western Cape, South Africa, and the archaeological identity of prehistoric hunter-gatherers within the last 2000 years. South African Archaeological Bulletin, 46, 7191.Google Scholar
Smith, B. H. (1984). Patterns of molar wear in hunter-gatherers and agriculturalists. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 63, 3956.Google Scholar
Stojanowski, C. M. (2013). An archaeological perspective on the burial record at Gobero. In Garcea, E. A. A., ed., Gobero: The No-Return Frontier. Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland. Frankfurt am Main: Africa Magna Verlag, pp. 4464.Google Scholar
Stojanowski, C. M. and Carver, C. L. (2011). Inference of emergent cattle pastoralism in the southern Sahara based on localized hypoplasia of the primary canine. International Journal of Paleopathology, 1, 8997.Google Scholar
Stojanowski, C. M. and Knudson, K. J. (2011). Biogeochemical inferences of mobility of Early Holocene fisher-foragers from the southern Sahara desert. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 146, 4961.Google Scholar
Stojanowski, C. M. and Knudson, K. J. (2014). Changing patterns of mobility as a response to climatic deterioration and aridification in the Middle Holocene southern Sahara. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 154, 7993.Google Scholar
Stojanowski, C. M., Carver, C. L., and Miller, K. M. (2014). Incisor avulsion, social identity and Saharan population history: New data from the Early Holocene southern Sahara. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 35, 7991.Google Scholar
Svizzero, S. and Tisdell, C. (2015). The persistence of hunting and gathering economies. Social Evolution & History, 14, 326.Google Scholar
Tafuri, M. A., Bentley, R. A., Manzi, G., and di Lernia, S. (2006). Mobility and kinship in the prehistoric Sahara: Strontium isotope analysis of Holocene human skeletons from the Acacus Mts. (southwestern Libya). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 25, 390402.Google Scholar
Temple, D. H. (2016). Caries: The ancient scourge. In Irish, J. D. and Scott, G. R., eds., A Companion to Dental Anthropology. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 433449.Google Scholar
ten Raa, E. (1986). The acquisition of cattle by hunter-gatherers: A traumatic experience in cultural change. Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika, 7, 361374.Google Scholar
Thorp, C. (1997). Evidence for interaction from recent hunter-gatherer sites in the Caledon Valley. African Archaeological Review, 14, 231256.Google Scholar
Tixier, J. (1962). Le Ténérén de l’Adrar Bous III. In Hugot, H.-J., ed., Missions Berliet Ténéré-Tchad. Paris: Arts et Métiers Graphiques, pp. 333348.Google Scholar
Turnbull, C. M. (1983). The Mbuti Pygmies: Change and Adaptation. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers.Google Scholar
Turner, C. G. II. (1979). Dental anthropological indications of agriculture among the Jomon people of central Japan: X. Peopling of the Pacific. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 51, 619636.Google Scholar
Turner, G. (1987). Hunters and herders of the Okacango Delta, northern Botswana. Botswana Notes and Records, 19, 2540.Google Scholar
Walker, B., Holling, C. S., Carpenter, S. R., and Kinzig, A. (2004). Resilience, adaptability and transformability in social-ecological systems. Ecology and Society, 9, 5.Google Scholar
Walker, M. J. C., Berkelhammer, M., Björck, S., et al. (2012). Formal subdivision of the Holocene series/epoch: A discussion paper by a working group of INTIMATE (Integration of ice-core, marine and terrestrial records) and the subcommission on Quaternary stratigraphy (International Commission on Stratigraphy). Journal of Quaternary Science, 27, 649659.Google Scholar
Woodburn, J. (1982a). Egalitarian societies. Man, 17, 431451.Google Scholar
Woodburn, J. (1982b). Social dimensions of death in four African hunting and gathering societies. In Bloch, M. and Parry, J., eds., Death and the Regeneration of Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 187210.Google Scholar
Woodburn, J. (1988). African hunter-gatherer social organization: Is it best understood as a product of encapsulation? In Ingold, T., Riches, D., and Woodburn, J., eds., Hunters and Gatherers 1. History, Evolution and Social Change. Oxford: Berg. pp. 3164.Google Scholar
Woodburn, J. (1997). Indigenous discrimination: The ideological basis for local discrimination against hunter-gatherer minorities in sub-Saharan Africa. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 20, 345361.Google Scholar
Woodburn, J. (2016). Silent trade with outsiders: Hunter-gatherers’ perspectives. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 6, 473496.Google Scholar
Wright, D. K. (2011). Frontier animal husbandry in the northeast and east African Neolithic: A multiproxy paleoenvironmental and paleodemographic study. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 67, 213244.Google Scholar
Zhang, H., Merrett, D. C., Xiao, X., et al. (2015). A comparative study of oral health in three Late Bronze Age populations with different subsistence practices in North China. Quaternary International, 405B, 4457.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×