Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-swr86 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-19T18:56:04.844Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Methodology of Historical Climate Reconstruction and its Application to Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Sharon E. Nicholson
Affiliation:
University of Virginia

Extract

This article deals with climatic reconstruction over a period of centuries, on the basis of indirect evidence found in historical and geographical sources. Histories, archives, local chronicles and journals of travellers and settlers contain references to lakes, landscapes, famines, droughts and floods, as well as occasional descriptions of climate and meteorological measurements. Such information can be combined with evidence from geology, palynology or the study of tree-rings to support hypotheses regarding climate and environment several centuries ago.

This methodology is here described and used to reconstruct the trend of rainfall fluctuation in Africa over the past millennium. Two approaches are considered: the one seeks to determine absolute variation (thus assessing whether particular episodes were wetter or drier than today); the other focuses on short-term climatic anomalies (e.g. droughts) in which rainfall differed from the mean prevailing at the time, without seeking to relate them to present conditions.

The results obtained from this study suggest that during the past millennium there have been two periods of relatively wet conditions in the semi-arid regions south of the Sahara: between the eighth and fourteenth centuries, and between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. Evidence for these episodes, and for synchronous fluctuations elsewhere in Africa is presented in the text.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1979

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

1 Sheets, H. and Morris, R., ‘Disaster in the Sahel’ Glantz, (ed.), The Politics of Natural Disaster (New York, 1976).Google Scholar

2 Bryson, R. A., ‘Drought in Sahelia: Who or what is to blame?’, Ecologist, iii (1973), 366–71.Google Scholar

3 Charney, J., ‘Dynamics of Deserts and Drought in the Sahel’, Quart. J. Roy. Meteor. Soc. ci (1975). 193–202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 Mensching, H., ‘Die Wüste schreitet voran’, Umschau in Wissenschaft und Technik, lxxviii (1978), 99106.Google Scholar

5 Fachs, A.et. at., ‘Dendrochronological studies in the Negev’, Israel Exploration Journal, xiii (1963), 291–99Google Scholar; Ginestous, G., ‘Le chêne zeen d'ain Draham’, Bull. Dir. Gén. de l' Agriculture, Commerce et Colonisation (1927), 312Google Scholar; Waisel, Y. and Lipschitz, N., ‘Dendrochronological studies in Israel’, La-Yaaran, xviii (1968), 122Google Scholar; Walter, H., ‘Die Periodizität von Trocker- und Regenzeiten in Deutsch-Südwestafrika auf Grund von Jahresringmessungen an Bäumen’, Berichten der deutschen botanischen Gesellschaft, liv (1936), 608–11.Google Scholar

6 A climatic anomaly is a period in which one or more aspects of the climate of some location differ from the long-term climatic mean.

7 Nicholson, S. E., ‘Climatic variations in the Sahel and other African regions during the past five centuries’, J. Arid Environments, 1 (1978), 324.Google Scholar

8 Charney, , ‘Dynamics’Google Scholar; Bryson, , ‘Drought’.Google Scholar

9 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’.Google Scholar

10 Ibid. 121–58.

11 See for example Schiffers, H., ‘Die Sahara und ihre Randgebiete’, IFO Afrika-Studien, lxii (1973), iii, 30–4.Google Scholar

12 Rogon, P., ‘Modifications naturelles du cycle hydrométéorologique depuis 10,000 ans’, C. R. Journées de l'Hydraulique Soc. Hydrotech. Fr. xii (1974)Google Scholar; Charmard, P., ‘Les paléoclimats du Sud-Ouest Saharien au Quaternaire Récent’, Coll. de Nouakchott sur les problèemes de la désertification (Nouakchott, 1973).Google Scholar

13 Crone, G. R., The Voyages of Cadamosto and other Documents on Western Africa in the Second Half of the Fifteenth Century (London, 1937), 53, 64Google Scholar; Pejml, K., ‘A contribution to the historical climatology of Morocco and Mauritania’, Stud. Geoph. et Geod. vi (1962), 257–79CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Negative evidence is never very satisfactory, but it may be significant that in his account of his southward journey Ibn Battuta makes no mention of desert before Taghaza; in any case, he implies that there were large trees (presumably baobabs) all along the route from Walata to the capital of Mali, at Niani (south of the modern Bamako) (Defrémery, C. and Sanguinetti, B. R. (tr. and ed.), Voyages d'Ibn Batoutah, Voyages d'Ibn Batoutah (Paris, 1858), 376– 9, 391–2)Google Scholar. One would have to go well to the south of Walata today to find such trees.

14 Toupet, C., ‘L'évolution du climat de la Mauritanie du Moyen-Age jusqu'à nos jours’, Coll. de Nouakchott sur les problèmes de la desertification (Nouakchott, 1973).Google Scholar

15 Chamard, , ‘Paléoclimats’.Google Scholar

16 Toupet, , ‘L'évolution du climat’.Google Scholar

17 Michel, P., ‘Les bassins des fleuves Sénégal et Gambie: étude géomorphologique: II’, Mémoires de l'O.R.S.T.O.M. no. 63 (Paris, 1973).Google Scholar

18 The ITCZ is essentially the boundary between the southwest rain-bearing winds south of the Sahara and the dry northeast trade winds prevailing over the desert.

19 Daveau, S., ‘La découverte du climat d'Afrique tropicale au cours des navigations portugaises’, Bull. Inst. fond. Afr. noire, ser. B. xxxi (1969), 953–88.Google Scholar

20 Vita-Finzi, C., Mediterranean Valleys (London, 1969Google Scholar); idem, ‘The Rharbarian formation of Morocco’, Man, iii (1968), 484–7.

21 Gigout, M., ‘Ages par radiocarbone de deux formations des environs de Rabat’, C. R. Acad. Sci. ccxlix (1959), 2802–3.Google Scholar

22 Brooks, C. E. P., Le Climat du Sahara et de l'Arabie (Paris, 1932).Google Scholar

23 Crone, , Voyages, map.Google Scholar

24 Michel, , ‘Bassins’.Google Scholar

25 Plote, G., L'Afrique Sahélienne se dessèche-t-elle? (Orléans, 1974), 14.Google Scholar

26 This is from a revised version of a Lake Chad curve published in Maley, J., ‘Mécanisme des changements climatiques aux basses latitudes’, Paleogeography, Paleoclimatotogy, Paleoecology, xiv (1973), 193227CrossRefGoogle Scholar

27 Maley, J., ‘Analyses polliniques et paléoclimatologie des 12 derniers millénaires du Bassin du Tchad (Afrique Centrale)’, Comité Français pour le dixième Congrès de l'I.N.Q.U.A (Birmingham, 1977).Google Scholar

28 Talbot, M. and Delibrias, G., ‘Holocene variations in the level of Lake Bosumtwi, Ghana’, Nature, cclxviii (1977), 722–4CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Talbot suggests that wind may be the primary factor here, but I do not believe that the observed variations could have taken place without a marked change in rainfall.

29 Gasse, F., ‘L'évolution des lacs de l'Afar Central (Ethiopie et T.F.A.I.) du Plio-Pléistocène à l'Actuel, Ph.D., thesis, Univ. de Paris vi (Paris, 1975Google Scholar): Gasse, F.et al., ‘Variations hydrologiques et extension des lacs holocènes du desert Danakil’, Paleogeography, Paleoclimatology and Paleoecology, xv (1974), 109–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Rognon, P. and Gasse, F., ‘Evolution des lacs depuis le Pléistocene supérieur dans l'Afar central’, Bull. ASEQUA, nos. 42–43 (1974), 919.Google Scholar

30 Rogon, , ‘Modifications’.Google Scholar

31 Butzer, K. W., ‘Recent history of an Ethiopian Delta’, Univ. Chicago Geogr. Dep. Res. Papers, 136 (Chicago, 1974), 123–30.Google Scholar

32 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’, 95–6.Google Scholar

33 Hamilton, A. C., ‘The interpretation of pollen diagrams from highland Ugand’, in Van Zinderen Bakker, E. M. (ed.), Palaeoecology of Africa, Palaeoecology of Africa (Cape Town, 1972), 110.Google Scholar

34 Cloudsley-Thompson, J. L., ‘Recent expansion of the Sahara’, Intern. J. Environmental Studies, ii (1971), 35–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Brooks, C. E. P., Climate through the Ages (London, 1970).Google Scholar

35 Butzer, K. W. and Hansen, C. L., Desert and River in Nubia: Geomorphology and Prehistoric Environments at the Aswan Reservoir (Madison, 1968Google Scholar). The port north of Port Sudan would have been Aydhab; its history is discussed in Hasan, Y. F., The Arabs and the Sudan (Edinburgh, 1967).Google Scholar

36 Maley, , ‘Mecanisme’.Google Scholar

37 Butzer, , ‘Recent history of an Ethiopian delta’.Google Scholar

38 Gasse, , 'évolution des lacs’.Google Scholar

39 Butzer, , ‘Recent history of an Ethiopian delta’, 125Google Scholar; dating is based on estimated time of formation of geomorphologic features and both a ‘short’ and a ‘long’ chronology are given. This date is from the ‘long’ chronology, the more probable one.

40 de Heinzelin, J., ‘Carte des extensions glaciaires du Ruwenzori’. Biul. Peryglac. xi (1962), 133–9Google Scholar

41 Hövermann, J., ‘úber die Höhenlage der Schneegrenze in äthiopien und ihre Schwankungen in historischer Zeit’, Nachr. Akad. Wiss. Goettingen, iia (1959), 111–37.Google Scholar

42 Brooks, Climate through the Ages.

43 Dale, I. R., ‘Is East Africa drying up?’, East African Agricultural Journal (1952), 116–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

44 Toussoun, O., ‘Mémoire sur l'histoire du Nil’, Mémoires de l'lnstitut d'Egypte, ix (1923), 63213.Google Scholar

45 Popper, W., ‘The Cairo nilomete’, Univ. of Calif. Pub. in Semitic Philology, xii (1951).Google Scholar

46 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’.Google Scholar

47 Ibid. 159–76.

48 Brooks, , Climate through the Ages.Google Scholar

49 Curtin, P. D., Economic Change in Pre-Colonial Africa: Supplementary Evidence (Madison, 1975Google Scholar). appendix I.

50 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’, 98112Google Scholar, 159–76, 257–63.

51 Cissoko, S.-M., ‘Famines et épidemics à Tomboucto et dans la Boucle du Niger du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle’, Bull. Inst. Fr. Afr. Noire, ser. B. xxx (1968), 806–21.Google Scholar

52 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’.Google Scholar

53 Schove, D. J., ‘Eclipses, comets and the spectrum of time in Africa’, J. Brit. Astr. Assn. lxxviii (1968), 91–7.Google Scholar

54 Cissoko, , ‘Famines’.Google Scholar

55 Ibid.

56 Barth, H., Travels and Discoveries in North and Central Africa, 1849–1855, iii (New York, 1859Google Scholar; reprinted London, 1965), 326, 353.

57 Urvoy, Y., Histoire de l'empire du Bornu (Paris, 1949Google Scholar; reprinted Amsterdam, 1968).

58 Marchika, J., La peste en Afrique septentrionale (Algiers, 1927).Google Scholar

59 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’ Nicholson, ‘Climatic variations’, 7.Google Scholar

60 Chamard, , ‘Paléoclimats’.Google Scholar

61 Michel, , ‘Bassins’.Google Scholar

62 Adanson, M., A Voyage to Senegal, the Isle of Gorée and the River Gambia (London, 1759).Google Scholar

63 Plote, , ‘L'Afrique’.Google Scholar

64 Maley, , ‘Mécanisme’.Google Scholar

65 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’.Google Scholar

66 Browne, W. G., Travels in Africa, Egypt, and Syria (London, 1799), 581Google Scholar

67 Hiller, J., ‘Two letters from Cape Corse In Guinea’. Phil. Trans. (1697), 687707.Google Scholar

68 Barbot, J., A Description of the Coasts of North and South Guinea, and of Ethiopia Inferior, Vulgarly Angola (London, 1732), 191–6, 32–3, 108.Google Scholar

69 Bosman, W., A New and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea, Divided into the Gold, the Slave, and the Ivory Coasts (London, 1705Google Scholar, reprinted 1967), 104–15.

70 Winterbottom, T. M., An Account of the Native Africans in the Neighbourhood of Sierra Leone (1803; reprinted London, 1969Google Scholar), 21–45, 283–91.

71 Matthews, J., Voyage to the River Sierra Leone on the Coast of Africa (1785–87) (London, 1788Google Scholar; reprinted London, 1966), 26–35.

72 De Marees, P., Beschryvinghe ende historische verhael van het Gout Koninckrijck van Gunea anders de Goutcuste de Mina genaemt, liggende in het deel van Africa (The Hague, 1912), 114–20.Google Scholar

73 Talbot, and Delibrias, , ‘Holocene’.Google Scholar

74 Nicholson, , ‘Climatic Variations’.Google Scholar

75 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’, 159–76.Google Scholar

76 Caillié, R., Journal d'un Voyage è Tombouctou et e` Jenné dans l'Afrique Centrale (Paris, 1830),Google Scholar

77 Caillié, , Journal, 280Google Scholar; Ritter, K., Géographie générale compareée (Paris, 1836), 89ff.Google Scholar

78 Raffenel, A., Voyage dans l'Afrique occidentale exécuté en 1843 et 1844 (Paris, 1846), 257.Google Scholar

79 Cloudsley-Thompson, , ‘Expansion’.Google Scholar

80 Nicholson, , ‘Chronology’, 113–20Google Scholar; Nicholson, , ‘Climatic Variations’, 1314.Google Scholar

81 Bernus, E., ‘Drought in Niger Republic’, Savanna, ii, 11 (1973), 129–32Google Scholar; Grove, A. T., ‘A note on the remarkably low rainfall of the Sudan zone in 1913Google Scholar’, ibid. 133–8.

82 Nicholson, S. E., ‘A chronology of African droughts and wetter episodes since 1680Google Scholar’, forthcoming.

83 Much useful data was elicited by a Drought Study Project initiated in 1974 by the African History Seminar at the School of Oriental and African Studies and the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, London; an interim report was presented by Dr Fisher, H. J. on 26 February 1975.Google Scholar