Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-17T17:25:17.083Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Radiocarbon Dates from Bosumpra Cave, Abetifi, Ghana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

Andrew B. Smith
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Ghana

Extract

In 1940 Professor Thurstan Shaw excavated a trench in the cave known as Bosumpra at Abetifi (6° 41′N:0° 44′W) on the borderline between the moist forest and the northern marginal forest (fig. 1). Bosumpra is one of the four main ‘abosom’ (lesser) gods of the Guan pantheon (Brokenshaw 1966, 156). The report (Shaw, 1944) showed that the cave was formerly inhabited by a people with a pottery-using microlithic culture and provided the first analytical description of the microlithic industries from the forest regions of West Africa. As the site was the first of its kind to be excavated, and the excavation was carried out before the advent of radiocarbon dating, there was no way of knowing what age this industry was, or how long the cave had been occupied, beyond placing it within the rubric of the so-called “Guinea Neolithic”.

To attempt to clarify this problem a group of students from the Department of Archaeology at the University of Ghana and myself conducted the excavation of a small witness section (fig. 2) in the cave over New Year 1973/74 with the specific aim of collecting organic material for dating. We were fortunate in finding adequate amounts of charcoal at all levels. Two of these samples were submitted to Rikagaku Kenkyusho, Japan, for dating.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1975

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

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Brokensha, D., 1966. Social Change at Larteh, Ghana. Clarendon Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Dalziel, J. M., 1937. The Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa. Crown Agents for Overseas Governments and Administrations, London.Google Scholar
Fagg, B., 1959. ‘The Nok Culture in Prehistory’. J. of the Hist. Soc. of Nigeria, 1:4, 288293.Google Scholar
Fagg, B., 1969. ‘Recent Work in West Africa: new light on the Nok culture’. World Archaeology, 1, 4150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flight, C., 1968. ‘Kintampo 1967’. W. African Archaeol. Newsletter, 8, 1520.Google Scholar
Gabel, C., in press, Forthcoming issue of Liberian Studies Journal.Google Scholar
Irvine, F. R., 1961. Woody Plants of Ghana. Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Shaw, C. T., 1941. ‘A Microlithic Industry, Gold Coast’. Antiquity, 15, 8687.Google Scholar
Shaw, C. T. 1944. ‘Report on Excavations carried out in the Cave known as “Bosumpra” at Abetifi, Kwahu, Gold Coast Colony’. PPS 10, 167.Google Scholar
Shaw, T., 1972. ‘Finds at the Iwo Ileru Rockshelter, Western Nigeria’. Actes du 6e Congrès panafricain de Préhistoire, Dakar, 1967, 190–92.Google Scholar
Ward, W. E. F., 1966. A History of Ghana. Third edition, George Allen and Unwin, London.Google Scholar
Willett, F., 1971. ‘A Survey of Recent Results in the Radiocarbon Chronology of Western and Northern Africa’. J. of African History, 12, 339–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar