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Prehistoric West Africa

The prehistory of West Africa spans from the earliest human presence in the region until the emergence of the Iron Age in West Africa. West African populations were considerably mobile and interacted with one another throughout the population history of West Africa.[2] Acheulean tool-using archaic humans may have dwelled throughout West Africa since at least between 780,000 BP and 126,000 BP (Middle Pleistocene).[3] During the Pleistocene, Middle Stone Age peoples (e.g., Iwo Eleru people,[4] possibly Aterians), who dwelled throughout West Africa between MIS 4 (71,000 BP) and MIS 2 (29,000 BP, Last Glacial Maximum),[5] were gradually replaced by incoming Late Stone Age peoples, who migrated into West Africa[6] as an increase in humid conditions resulted in the subsequent expansion of the West African forest.[7] West African hunter-gatherers occupied western Central Africa (e.g., Shum Laka) earlier than 32,000 BP,[4] dwelled throughout coastal West Africa by 12,000 BP,[8] and migrated northward between 12,000 BP and 8000 BP as far as Mali, Burkina Faso,[8] and Mauritania.[9]

Round Head rock art figures and zoomorphic figures, including a Barbary sheep[1]

During the Holocene, Niger-Congo speakers independently created pottery in Ounjougou, Mali[10][11][12] – the earliest pottery in Africa[13] – by at least 9400 BCE,[10] and along with their pottery,[13] as well as wielding independently invented bows and arrows,[14][15] migrated into the Central Sahara,[13] which became their primary region of residence by 10,000 BP.[14] The emergence and expansion of ceramics in the Sahara may be linked with the origin of Round Head and Kel Essuf rock art, which occupy rockshelters in the same regions (e.g., Djado, Acacus, Tadrart).[16] Hunters in the Central Sahara farmed, stored, and cooked undomesticated central Saharan flora,[17] underwent domestication of antelope,[18] and domesticated and shepherded Barbary sheep.[17] After the Kel Essuf Period and Round Head Period of the Central Sahara, the Pastoral Period followed.[19] Some of the hunter-gatherers who created the Round Head rock art may have adopted pastoral culture, and others may have not.[20] As a result of increasing aridification of the Green Sahara, Central Saharan hunter-gatherers and cattle herders may have used seasonal waterways as the migratory route taken to the Niger River and Chad Basin of West Africa.[21] In 2000 BCE, "Thiaroye Woman",[22] also known as the "Venus of Thiaroye,"[22][23] may have been the earliest statuette created in Sub-Saharan West Africa; it may have particularly been a fertility statuette, created in the region of Senegambia,[23] and may be associated with the emergence of complexly organized pastoral societies in West Africa between 4000 BCE and 1000 BCE.[24] Though possibly developed as early as 5000 BCE,[25] Nsibidi may have also developed in 2000 BCE,[25][26] as evidenced by depictions of the West African script on Ikom monoliths at Ikom, in Nigeria.[25] Migration of Saharan peoples south of the Sahelian region resulted in seasonal interaction with and gradual absorption of West African hunter-gatherers, who primarily dwelt in the savannas and forests of West Africa.[8] In West Africa, which may have been a major regional cradle in Africa for the domestication of crops and animals,[27][28] Niger-Congo speakers domesticated the helmeted guineafowl[29] between 5500 BP and 1300 BP;[27] domestication of field crops occurred throughout various locations in West Africa, such as yams (Dioscorea praehensilis) in the Niger River basin between eastern Ghana and western Nigeria (northern Benin), rice (oryza glaberrima) in the Inner Niger Delta region of Mali, pearl millet (Cenchrus americanus) in northern Mali and Mauritania, and cowpeas in northern Ghana.[28] After having persisted as late as 1000 BP,[8] or some period of time after 1500 CE,[30] remaining West African hunter-gatherers, many of whom dwelt in the forest-savanna region, were ultimately acculturated and admixed into the larger groups of West African agriculturalists, akin to the migratory Bantu-speaking agriculturalists and their encounters with Central African hunter-gatherers.[8] Iron metallurgy may have been developed independently in West Africa [31][32] sometime between around 3,000-1,000 BC, with archaeological sites containing iron smelting furnaces found at sites at Lejja, Nigeria (Eze-Uzomaka 2009),[32][33] Opi (Holl 2009),[32][34] the Nok culture,[35] Oboui, and others.[36]

Climate edit

 
West African monsoon season

Early Stone Age edit

In the Falémé River Valley zone, with the exception of stadial phases and interstadial phases, there has been a fairly steady state of humidity and temperature throughout a span of 120,000 years.[37] Additionally, for at least the previous 100,000 years, the presence of flora (e.g., trees) has remained quite consistent.[37] Consequently, this area has remained habitable for human populations, from the Early Stone Age, through the Middle Stone Age, to the Later Stone Age.[37] Furthermore, for the previous 100,000 years, compared to the climate of East Africa, the Pleistocene climate in West Africa has been more steady and humid.[37]

In the Atakora mountainous zone, the Pleistocene climate has supported continuity in human habitation, from the Early Stone Age, through the Middle Stone Age, to the Later Stone Age, which spanned the previous 120,000 years.[37]

Middle Stone Age edit

In the Falémé River Valley zone, with the exception of stadial phases and interstadial phases, there has been a fairly steady state of humidity and temperature throughout a span of 120,000 years.[37] Additionally, for at least the previous 100,000 years, the presence of flora (e.g., trees) has remained quite consistent.[37] Consequently, this area has remained habitable for human populations, from the Early Stone Age, through the Middle Stone Age, to the Later Stone Age.[37] Furthermore, for the previous 100,000 years, compared to the climate of East Africa, the Pleistocene climate in West Africa has been more steady and humid.[37]

In the Jos Plateau zone, the Pleistocene climate has fluctuated mostly during stadial phases and interstadial phases, throughout the previous 120,000 years; specifically, stable climate occurred between MIS 4 and MIS 2, and climate fluctuations occurred during the periods and sub-periods of MIS 1 and MIS 5.[37] Consequently, the human habitation areas in Jos Plateau, which is only composed of Middle Stone Age sites, has been distinct in terms of culture and environment in comparison to the Falémé River Valley.[37]

In the Atakora mountainous zone, the Pleistocene climate has supported continuity in human habitation, from the Early Stone Age, through the Middle Stone Age, to the Later Stone Age, which spanned the previous 120,000 years.[37]

Later Stone Age edit

In the Falémé River Valley zone, with the exception of stadial phases and interstadial phases, there has been a fairly steady state of humidity and temperature throughout a span of 120,000 years.[37] Additionally, for at least the previous 100,000 years, the presence of flora (e.g., trees) has remained quite consistent.[37] Consequently, this area has remained habitable for human populations, from the Early Stone Age, through the Middle Stone Age, to the Later Stone Age.[37] Furthermore, for the previous 100,000 years, compared to the climate of East Africa, the Pleistocene climate in West Africa has been more steady and humid.[37]

In the Atakora mountainous zone, the Pleistocene climate has supported continuity in human habitation, from the Early Stone Age, through the Middle Stone Age, to the Later Stone Age, which spanned the previous 120,000 years.[37]

In 15,000 BP, the West African monsoon transformed the landscape of Africa and began the Green Sahara period; greater rainfall during the summer season resulted in the growth of humid conditions (e.g., lakes, wetlands) and the savanna (e.g., grassland, shrubland) in North Africa.[38] Between 5500 BP and 4000 BP, the Green Sahara period ended.[38]

During the 1st millennium cal BCE, between the Later Stone Age and Early Iron Age, the environment was conducive for the growth of pearl millet in the basin area of Lake Chad.[39]

Pastoral Neolithic edit

By 4500 BP, sources of water in the Sahara had dried, and subsequently, drought occurred, which resulted in a decrease in the presence of humidity in the region.[39] Concurrent with the decrease in Saharan humidity, between 3500 BP and 2500 BP, the Sahel underwent an increase in humidity within the region.[39]

Early Stone Age edit

Acheulean tool-using archaic humans may have dwelled throughout West Africa since at least between 780,000 BP and 126,000 BP (Middle Pleistocene).[3]

At Ounjougou, in Mali, a yet-to-be-dated Lower Paleolithic economy (e.g., pebble cores, pebble tools, polyhedrons, spheroids, sub-spheroids), with unpreserved Acheulean implements (e.g., cleavers, handaxes), is present.[40]

Middle Stone Age edit

 
 
Iwo Eleru site and Iwo Eleru skull

Middle Stone Age West Africans may have dwelled at Ounjougou, Mali (71,000 BP – 59,000 BP, 59,000 BP – 28,000 BP), Faleme Valley, Senegal (Late MIS 5), Tiemassas, Senegal (62,000 BP – 25,000 BP),[5][7] Birimi, Ghana (50,000 BP – 20,000 BP),[7] Missira, Senegal (MIS 4),[5] Toumboura, Senegal (33,000 BP),[5][7] Laminia, Gambia (24,000 BP – 21,000 BP),[7] Ndiayène Pendao, Senegal (11,600 BP),[5][7] and Saxonomunya (11,000 BP), near Falémé, Mali.[7] There is also scant evidence of Middle Stone Age settlement at Ounjougou, Mali between 191,000 BP – 130,000 BP.[5]

Aside the scant evidence, Middle Stone Age West Africans likely dwelled continuously in West Africa between MIS 4 and MIS 2 and likely were not present in West Africa before MIS 5.[5] Amid MIS 5, Middle Stone Age West Africans may have migrated across the West Sudanian savanna and continued to reside in the region (e.g., West Sudanian savanna, West African Sahel).[5] In the Late Pleistocene, Middle Stone Age West Africans began to dwell along parts of the forest and coastal region of West Africa (e.g., Tiemassas, Senegal).[5] More specifically, by at least 61,000 BP, Middle Stone Age West Africans may have begun to migrate south of the West Sudanian savanna, and, by at least 25,000 BP, may have begun to dwell near the coast of West Africa.[5] Amid aridification in MIS 5 and regional change of climate in MIS 4, in the Sahara and the Sahel, Aterians may have migrated southward into West Africa (e.g., Baie du Levrier, Mauritania; Tiemassas, Senegal; Lower Senegal River Valley).[5]

In 35,000 BP, Middle Stone Age West Africans and West African archaic humans may have admixed with one another, resulting in the development of the Iwo Eleru people (e.g., Iwo Eleru skull), who may have remained rather isolated in West Africa, and thus, remained distinct from both contemporaneous Africans in the Sahara and from any other African populations amid the transitory period between the Pleistocene and Holocene.[41]

Later Stone Age edit

32,000 BP – 20,000 BP (30,000 BCE – 18,000 BCE) edit

 
Representations of West African hunter-gatherers from the Dahomey region of Benin

Earlier than 32,000 BP,[4] or by 30,000 BP,[7][8] Late Stone Age West African hunter-gatherers were dwelling in the forests of western Central Africa[7][8] (e.g., earlier than 32,000 BP at de Maret in Shum Laka,[4] 12,000 BP at Mbi Crater).[8] An excessively dry Ogolian period occurred, spanning from 20,000 BP to 12,000 BP.[4] By 15,000 BP, the number of settlements made by Middle Stone Age West Africans decreased as there was an increase in humid conditions, expansion of the West African forest, and increase in the number of settlements made by Late Stone Age West African hunter-gatherers.[7] Macrolith-using late Middle Stone Age peoples (e.g., the possibly archaic human admixed[6] or late-persisting early modern human[42][43] Iwo Eleru fossils of the late Middle Stone Age), who dwelled in Central Africa, to western Central Africa, to West Africa, were displaced by microlith-using Late Stone Age Africans (e.g., non-archaic human admixed Late Stone Age Shum Laka fossils dated between 7000 BP and 3000 BP) as they migrated from Central Africa, to western Central Africa, into West Africa.[6] Between 16,000 BP and 12,000 BP, Late Stone Age West Africans began dwelling in the eastern and central forested regions (e.g., Ghana, Ivory Coast, Nigeria;[7] between 18,000 BP and 13,000 BP at Temet West and Asokrochona in the southern region of Ghana, 13,050 ± 230 BP at Bingerville in the southern region of Ivory Coast, 11,200 ± 200 BP at Iwo Eleru in Nigeria)[8] of West Africa.[7] By 11,000 BP, the late settlement made by Middle Stone Age West Africans and earliest settlement made by Late Stone Age West African hunter-gatherers emerged in the westernmost region (e.g., Falémé Valley, Senegal) of West Africa.[7] Middle Stone Age West Africans and Late Stone Age West African hunter-gatherers likely did not become admixed with one another and were culturally and ecologically distinct from one another.[7]

20,000 BP – 10,000 BP (18,000 BCE – 8000 BCE) edit

 
Africa in 12,000 BCE

According to MacDonald (2003), the regional birthplace of Nilo-Saharan speakers and Niger-Congo speakers spanned from the Nile Valley to the Maghreb, after the Aterian period.[8] In 20,000 BP, amid the Late Pleistocene, Proto-Niger-Saharan speakers, who are identified as Mechtoids, persisted along the coasts and in the mountainous areas of North Africa.[8] Between 12,000 BP and 10,000 BP, amid the Holocene, Niger-Saharan speakers migrated southward into the Sahara and linguistic divergence began to increase; subsequently, they gradually encountered, assimilated, and absorbed West African populations that persisted along coastal West Africa.[8] Libyco-Berber epigraphy, while possibly being composed in playfulness, as a form of code, or as an unknown language unrelated to modern Berber languages, may have also been composed in a Nilo-Saharan language.[44]

As of 19,000 years ago, Africans, bearing haplogroup E1b1a-V38, likely traversed across the Sahara, from east to west.[45]

Around 18,000 BP, the ancestors of Mende people, along with Gambian peoples, grew in population size.[46]

The Taforalts of Morocco, who have been radiocarbon dated between 15,100 cal BP and 13,900 cal BP, and were found to be 63.5% Natufian, were also found to be 36.5% Sub-Saharan African (e.g., Hadza), which is drawn out, most of all, by West Africans (e.g. Yoruba, Mende).[47] In addition to having similarity with the remnant of a more basal Sub-Saharan African lineage (e.g., a basal West African lineage shared between Yoruba and Mende peoples), the Sub-Saharan African DNA in the Taforalt people of the Iberomaurusian culture may be best represented by modern West Africans.[48]

In 15,000 BP, Niger-Congo speakers may have migrated from the Sahelian region of West Africa, along the Senegal River, and introduced haplogroup L2a1 into North Africa, resulting in modern Mauritanian peoples and Berbers of Tunisia inheriting it.[49]

Between 12,000 BP and 8000 BP, West African hunter-gatherers then likely migrated from coastal West Africa, toward the north of West Africa[4][8] as far as Mali, Burkina Faso,[8] and Mauritania,[9] as evidenced by their microlithic industries (e.g., quartz, sandstone).[4] Amid the early period of the Holocene, West African hunter-gatherers may have had Sahelian stone industries, from Senegal to Niger, which, while it may have derived from a distinct Sub-Saharan African stone tradition, may have derived from the Shum Laka stone tradition of Cameroon.[8]

While the Niger-Congo migration may have been from West Africa into Kordofan, possibly from Kordofan, Sudan, Niger-Congo speakers[29] (e.g., Mande),[50] accompanied by undomesticated helmeted guineafowls, may have traversed into West Africa, domesticated the helmeted guineafowls by 3000 BCE, and via the Bantu expansion, traversed into other parts of Sub-Saharan Africa (e.g., Central Africa, East Africa, Southern Africa).[29]

According to Steverding (2020), Near the African Great Lakes, schistosomes (e.g., S. mansoni, S. haematobium) underwent evolution.[51] Subsequently, there was an expansion alongside the Nile River.[51] From Egypt, the presence of schistosomes expanded into Western Africa and then subsequently to Central and Southern Africa. Whether this was specifically due to the migration of Yoruba people, into Western Africa[51] as well as the migratory Bantu-speaking peoples, into the rest of Sub-Saharan Africa (e.g., Southern Africa, Central Africa) is uncertain.[51]

In the 10th millennium BCE, Niger-Congo speakers developed pyrotechnology and employed subsistence strategy at Ounjougou, Mali.[10] Prior to 9400 BCE, Niger-Congo speakers independently created and used matured ceramic technology[10][11][12] (e.g., pottery, pots) to contain and cook grains (e.g., Digitaria exilis, pearl millet);[10][52] ethnographically and historically, West African women have been the creators of pottery in most West African ceramic traditions[11][53][54] and their production of ceramics is closely associated with creativity and fertility.[54] Amid the tenth millennium BCE, microlith-using West Africans migrated into and dwelt in Ounjougou alongside earlier residing West Africans in Ounjougou.[55] Among two existing cultural areas, earlier residing West Africans in Ounjougou were of a cultural area encompassing the Sahara region (e.g., Tenere, Niger/Chad; Air, Niger; Acacus, Libya/Algeria;[55] Tagalagal, Niger; Temet, Niger)[56] of Africa and microlith-using West Africans were of a cultural area encompassing the forest region of West Africa.[55]

 
Round Head figure wearing a Barbary sheep-styled mask[1]

Following the Ogolian period, between the late 10th millennium BCE and the early 9th millennium BCE, the creators of the Ounjougou pottery – the earliest pottery in Africa – migrated, along with their pottery, from Ounjougou, Mali into the Central Sahara.[13] The emergence and expansion of ceramics in the Sahara may be linked with the origin of both the Round Head and Kel Essuf rock art, which occupy rockshelters in the same regions (e.g., Djado, Acacus, Tadrart) as well as have a common resemblance (e.g., traits, shapes).[16] Whether or not Ounjougou ceramic culture spread as far as Bir Kiseiba, Egypt, which had pottery that resembled Ounjougou pottery, had implements used for grinding like at Ounjougou, and was followed by subsequent ceramic cultures (e.g., Wadi el Akhdar, Sarurab, Nabta Playa), remains to be determined.[13] Between 8200 BCE and 6400 BCE, Central Saharan hunter-gatherers of Libya (e.g., Takarkori, Uan Afuda) gathered a diverse selection of flora (e.g., aquatic plants from lakes, grasses from savanna grasslands) and utilized ceramic pots to process and cook the flora.[57] By 10,000 BP, the primary region of residence for Niger-Congo speakers, who wielded bows and arrows, may have been the southern region of the Central Sahara.[14] Amid an early period of the Holocene, semi-settled Epipaleolithic and Mesolithic hunters, who created a refined material culture (e.g., stone tools, decorated pottery) as early as 10,000 BP,[58] also created the engraved Kel Essuf and painted Round Head rock art styles located in the region (e.g., some in the Acacus, some in the Tadrart, some in the Jebel Uweinat) of Libya, in the region (e.g., some in the Tadrart, most abundant in Tassili n'Ajjer) of Algeria, in the region (e.g., Djado) of Nigeria, and the region (e.g., Djado) of Niger.[58][59][60] Amid the early Sahara, Round Head rock artists, who had a sophisticated culture and engaged in the activity of hunting and gathering, also developed pottery, utilized vegetation, and managed animals.[61] The cultural importance of shepherded Barbary sheep (Ammotragus lervia) is shown via their presence in Round Head rock art throughout the Central Sahara (e.g., Libyan region of Tadrart Acacus, Algerian region of Tassili n’Ajjer).[62] Barbary sheep were corralled in stone enclosures near Uan Afuda cave.[62] From up to 9500 BP, this continued until the beginning of the Pastoral Neolithic in the Sahara.[62] Between 7500 BCE and 3500 BCE, amid the Green Sahara, undomesticated central Saharan flora were farmed, stored, and cooked, and domesticated animals (e.g., Barbary sheep) were milked and managed, by hunter-gatherers near the Takarkori rockshelter, which is representative of the broader Sahara; this continued until the beginning of the Pastoral Neolithic in the Sahara.[17]

Between 11,000 BP and 10,000 BP, the population ancestral to Yoruba people and Esan people grew in population size.[46]

As early as 11,000 years ago, Sub-Saharan West Africans, bearing macrohaplogroup L (e.g., L1b1a11, L1b1a6a, L1b1a8, L1b1a9a1, L2a1k, L3d1b1a), may have migrated through North Africa and into Europe, mostly into southern Europe (e.g., Iberia).[63]

In West Africa, the Holocene Wet Phase ushered in expanding rainforest and wooded savannah from Senegal to Cameroon.[64] Between 9000 BCE[64] and 5000 BCE,[64][65] Niger-Congo speakers independently developed agriculture (e.g., Yams/Dioscorea).[65] Oil palm and raffia palm were domesticated as early as 9000 BCE.[64] Two seed plants, black-eyed peas and voandzeia (African groundnuts) were domesticated, followed by okra and kola nuts.[64] Prior to 5000 BCE, their agricultural practices were spread throughout the woodland savanna, and afterward, were introduced southward into the West African forest.[65] Since most of the plants grew in the forest, the Niger-Congo speakers invented polished stone axes for clearing forest.[64]

10,000 BP – 7500 BP (8000 BCE – 5500 BCE) edit

During the Green Sahara, at Gobero, there were two groups: the Kiffians and the Tenerians.[66] Between 10,000 BP and 8000 BP, the Kiffians hunted (e.g., harpoons) undomesticated animals, constructed stylized (e.g., zig zags, wavy lines) pottery, and fished (e.g., fish hooks).[66] Between 7000 BP and 4500 BP, the Tenerians hunted, fished, herded cattle, and constructed pointillistic-designed ceramics.[66]

In the steppes and savannah of the Sahara and Sahel, the Nilo-Saharan speakers started to collect and domesticate wild millet and sorghum between 8000 BCE and 6000 BCE.[67] Later, gourds, watermelons, castor beans, and cotton were also collected and domesticated.[67] The people started capturing wild cattle and holding them in circular thorn hedges, resulting in domestication.[67]

Amid the early Holocene Wet Phase, Asselar man may have occupied Asselar, in the Saharan region of northern Mali,[68] near what was likely a lake,[69] between 9500 BP and 7000 BP.[68]

During the early period of the Holocene, in 9000 BP, Khoisan-related peoples admixed with the ancestors of the Igbo people, possibly in the western Sahara.[70][71]

By 8000 BP, canoes (e.g., Dufuna canoe) were being utilized in West Africa.[14] While some Niger-Congo speakers may have utilized bows and arrows to hunt, other Niger-Congo speakers (e.g., Atlantic, Bak, Kru, Kwa, Ịjọ), who diverged from the hunters, may have utilized canoes to search for resources in and along the river systems, toward the seacoast, of West Africa.[14] In Western Africa, there may have been independent invention of bows and arrows.[15]

Pastoral Neolithic edit

 
Africa in 5000 BCE

7500 BP – 6500 BP (5500 BCE – 4500 BCE) edit

 
Warrior/Shepherd figures and animals of the Pastoral period

As cattle pastoralism[72] (also known as the African cattle complex)[73] had endured in the Sahara since 7500 BP, amid the Pastoral period, Central Saharan hunters and herders may have lived together in a common area for a long period of time.[72] The Round Head painting tradition was brought to its formal conclusion as the Green Sahara underwent desertification.[20] Desertification may have resulted in migrations from the Central Saharan region, where the Round Head paintings are located, toward Lake Chad, the Niger Delta,[72] and the Nile Valley.[74] While some migrated south of the Sahara, other Central Saharan hunter-gatherers may have taken on the custom of pastoralism[20] (e.g., herding domesticated cattle and goats).[72] Meanwhile, as late as 2500 BP in the Central Sahara, some of the creators of the Round Head rock art may have continued to persist as hunters.[75]

With the exception of the guineafowl and very recent experiments with the domestication of local wild species, none of the domestic animals kept in west Africa are indigenous to the region. The first pastoral populations in Africa came from Northeast Africa and gradually migrated Southwest into Sub-Saharan West Africa during the onset of the mid to late Holocene dry phase.[76]

Amid the Green Sahara, the mutation for sickle cell originated in the Sahara[45] or in the northwest forest region of western Central Africa (e.g., Cameroon)[45][77] by at least 7,300 years ago,[45][77] though possibly as early as 22,000 years ago.[77][78] The ancestral sickle cell haplotype to modern haplotypes (e.g., Cameroon/Central African Republic and Benin/Senegal haplotypes) may have first arose in the ancestors of modern West Africans, bearing haplogroups E1b1a1-L485 and E1b1a1-U175 or their ancestral haplogroup E1b1a1-M4732.[45] West Africans (e.g., Yoruba and Esan of Nigeria), bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype, may have migrated through the northeastern region of Africa into the western region of Arabia.[45] West Africans (e.g., Mende of Sierra Leone), bearing the Senegal sickle cell haplotype,[45][79] may have migrated into Mauritania (77% modern rate of occurrence) and Senegal (100%); they may also have migrated across the Sahara, into North Africa, and from North Africa, into Southern Europe, Turkey, and a region near northern Iraq and southern Turkey.[79] Some may have migrated and introduced the Senegal and Benin sickle cell haplotypes into Basra, Iraq, where both occur equally.[79] West Africans, bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype, may have migrated into the northern region of Iraq (69.5%), Jordan (80%), Lebanon (73%), Oman (52.1%), and Egypt (80.8%).[79]

According to Roger Blench, paleobotanical analysis reveals evidence of an early material culture connection between ancient Egypt and Sub-Saharan Africa. The direction of transmission of these crops were from Sub-Saharan West Africa into ancient Egypt. Some of the plants that were analyzed were citrullus lanatus, or egusi melon/watermelon, found in the tomb of King Tutankhamun, cajanus cajan, or pigeon pea, found in a 12th Dynasty tomb at Thebes, vigna unguiculata, or cowpea, found in ancient Egypt during the 5th Dynasty, and ricinus communis, or castor bean, found in Pre-Dynastic contexts.[80]

Approximated to the Neolithic, there were "Negroid" skeletal remains found in West Africa.[81][82] At El Guettara, Mali, there were two individuals found.[81] At Karkarichinkat South, Mali, a skull was found.[82] At Ibalaghen, Mali, there was a cranium found,[81] which has been specifically dated between 7000 BP and 4000 BP.[83] At Tin Lalou, Mali, there was a cranium and mandible found,[81] which have been specifically dated between 7000 BP and 4000 BP.[83] At Tamaya Mellet, Niger, there were 12 individuals found,[81] which have been specifically dated between 7000 BP and 4000 BP.[83]

Though possibly developed as early as 5000 BCE,[25] Nsibidi may have developed in 2000 BCE,[25][26] as evidenced by depictions of the West African script on Ikom monoliths at Ikom, in Nigeria.[25]

Preceded by assumed earlier sites in the Eastern Sahara, tumuli with megalithic monuments developed as early as 4700 BCE in the Saharan region of Niger.[84] These megalithic monuments in the Saharan region of Niger and the Eastern Sahara may have served as antecedents for the mastabas and pyramids of ancient Egypt.[84] During Predynastic Egypt, tumuli were present at various locations (e.g., Naqada, Helwan).[84] The prehistoric tradition of monarchic tumuli-building is shared by both the West African Sahel and the Middle Nile regions.[85] Ancient Egyptian pyramids of the early dynastic period and Meroitic Kush pyramids are recognized by Faraji (2022) as part of and derived from an earlier architecturalSudanic-Sahelian” tradition of monarchic tumuli, which are characterized as “earthen pyramids” or “proto-pyramids.”[85] Faraji (2022) characterized Nobadia as the “last pharaonic culture of the Nile Valley” and described mound tumuli as being “the first architectural symbol of the sovereign’s return and reunification with the primordial mound upon his death.”[85] Faraji (2022) indicates that there may have been a cultural expectation of “postmortem resurrection” associated with tumuli in the funerary traditions of the West African Sahel (e.g., northern Ghana, northern Nigeria, Mali) and Nile Valley (e.g., Ballana, Qustul, Kerma, Kush).[85] Based on artifacts found in the tumuli from West Africa and Nubia, there may have been “a highly developed corporate ritual in which the family members of the deceased brought various items as offerings and tribute to the ancestors” buried in the tumuli and the tumuli may have “served as immense shrines of spiritual power for the populace to ritualize and remember their connection to the ancestral lineage as consecrated in the royal tomb.”[85]

In his analysis of West African cultures, Christopher Ehret found numerous examples of a Sudanic sacral kingship that originated in the Middle Nile. It is likely that it spread to the Niger Bend in West Africa from Nilo-Saharan languages speakers, who arrived there as early as the 6th millennium BCE. Some of these civilizations and cultures defined by Sudanic sacral kingship were Wadai, located east of the Lake Tchad, Kwarafara which dominated the Benue River from the 13th to 18th century CE, the 14th century CE Nri civilization, northeast of Igala in Nigeria, the medieval Songhay empire, built from Gao, the Hausa city-states, and the Soninké founders of the Wagadou empire.[86]

According to Michael Rowlands, there are basic commonalities between the function of Pharaohs and the Mfon of the Bamiléké people in the possession of negative and highly dangerous powers that could be put to ‘good use’ in maintaining order. Both the pharaoh and Bamileke chief authorize executions while mediating between principles of violence and legitimacy. The focus is very distinctively on the king’s body as autochthonous container and a conduit for the dispersal of substances. Rowlands posits that the ancient Egyptians and Sub-Saharan populations such as the Bamiléké share a proto cosmogony derived from the same ancient African ancestors. For Rowlands, the role of embodiment and containment of life giving/destructive forces has a certain relevance for understanding the distinctive features of contemporary African politics in the process of sparking an African renaissance to construct a new African history, identity and culture and to reassert the notion of Africanness.[87]

Between the 8th millennia BCE and the 4th millennia BCE, riverine farmers and savanna herders traversed the interconnected region of the Middle Nile Valley.[85] In the Saharan-Sahelian and Middle Nile Valley regions, dotted wavy line and wavy line pottery, which was produced between the 8th millennia BCE and the 4th millennia BCE (late Neolithic and early Bronze Age), preceded the emergence of monarchic tumuli; the spread of the pottery spanned from the savanna region to the eastern Saharan region, and from Mauritania to the Red Sea, which supports the conclusions of trade between the regions and their interconnectedness.[85] Wavy-line pottery developed six ceramic subvariants and dotted wavy-line pottery developed three ceramic subvariants; the locations for the earliest development of both 8th millennium BCE potteries were at Sagai and Sarurab in Sudan.[85] Wavy-line pottery spread throughout multiple locations (e.g., mostly in Central Nile; some in Hoggar Mountains, southern Algeria, Delibo Cave, Chad, Jebel Eghei, Chad, Tibesti, Chad, and Adrar Madet, Niger) in Africa.[85] Dotted wavy-line pottery spread throughout multiple locations (e.g., Ennedi Plateau, Niger Plateau, and Wadi Howar of Saharan-Sahelian region, interconnecting the regions of the Middle Nile River, Lake Chad, and Benue-Niger River) in Africa as well.[85] Both potteries also spread along a north-to-west regional axis (e.g., Wadi Howar, Ennedi Plateau, Chad, Jebel Uweinat, Gilf Kebir, Egypt) near the Saharan regions of Sudan and Egypt.[85] The tumuli from the kingdom of Kerma serve as a regional intermediary between the regions of the Nile River and the Niger River.[85]

The “Classical Sudanese” monarchic tumuli-building tradition, which lasted in Sudan (e.g., Kerma, Makuria, Meroe, Napata, Nobadia) until the early period of the 6th century CE as well as in West Africa and Central Africa until the 14th century CE, notably preceded the spread of Islam into the West African and Sahelian regions of Africa.[85] According to al-Bakrī, “the construction of tumuli and the accompanying rituals was a religious endeavor that emanated from the other elements” that he described, such as “sorcerers, sacred groves, idols, offerings to the dead, and the “tombs of their kings.””[85] Faraji (2022) indicated that the early dynastic period of ancient Egypt, Kerma of Kush, and the Nobadian culture of Ballana were similar to al-Bakrī’s descriptions of the Mande tumuli practices of ancient Ghana.[85] A characteristic of divine kingship sometimes includes monarchic funerary practices (e.g., Ancient Egyptian funerary practices).[85] In the lake region of Niger, two human burial sites included funerary rooms with graves that contain various bones (e.g., human, animal) and items (e.g., beads, ornaments, weapons).[85] In the Inland Niger Delta, 11th century CE and 15th century CE tumuli at El Oualedji and Koï Gourrey contained various bones (e.g., human, horse), human items (e.g., beads, bracelets, rings), and animal items (e.g., bells, harnesses, plaques).[85] Cultural similarities were also found with a Malinke king of Gambia, who along with his senior queen, human subjects within his kingdom, and his weapons, were buried in his home under a large mound the size of the house, as described by V. Fernandes.[85] Levtzion also acknowledged the cultural similarities between the monarchic tumuli-building traditions and practices (e.g., monumental Senegambian megaliths) of West Africa, such as Senegambia, Inland Niger Delta, and Mali, and the Nile Valley; these monarchic tumuli-building practices span the Sudanian savanna as manifestations of a trans-Sahelian common culture and heritage.[85] From the 5th millennium BCE to the 14th century CE, earthen and stone tumuli were developed between Senegambia and Chad.[85] Among 10,000 burial mounds in Senegambia, 3,000 megalithic burial mounds in Senegambia were constructed between 200 BCE and 100 CE, and 7,000 earthen burial mounds in Senegal were constructed in the 2nd millennium CE.[85] Between 1st century CE and 15th century CE, megalithic monuments without tumuli were constructed.[85] Megalithic and earthen Senegambian tumuli, which may have been constructed by the Wolof people (Serer people) or Sosse people (Mande peoples).[85] Sudanese tumuli (e.g., Kerma, C-Group), which date to the mid-3rd millennium BCE, share cultural similarities with Senegambian tumuli.[85] Between the 6th century CE and 14th century CE, stone tumuli circles, which at a single site usually encircle a burial site of half-meter that is covered by a burial mound, were constructed in Komaland; the precursors for this 3rd millennium BCE tumuli style of Komaland, Ghana and Senegambia are regarded by Faraji (2022) to be Kerma Kush and the A-Group culture of ancient Nubia.[85] While the stele-circled burial mounds of C-Group culture of Nubia are regarded as precursors for the megalithic burial mounds of Senegambia, Kerma tumuli are regarded as precursors for the stone tumuli circles of Komaland.[85] Based on a founding narrative of the Hausa people, Faraji (2022) concludes the possibility of the “pre-Islamic rulers of Hausaland” being a “dynasty of female monarchs reminiscent of the kandake of Meroitic Kush.”[85] The tumuli of Durbi Takusheyi, which have been dated between the 13th century CE and the 16th century CE, may have connection to tumuli from Ballana and Makuria.[85] Tumuli have also been found at Kissi, in Burkina Faso, and at Daima, in Nigeria.[85]

6500 BP – 5500 BP (4500 BCE – 3500 BCE) edit

By 6300 BP, pottery began to appear in Konduga.[88] Occurring in the era of Mega Lake Chad, the pottery was designed in the custom of Saharan ceramics.[89]

By at least the 4th millennium BCE, as indicated via the painted rock art of Tassili n’Ajjer, Proto-Fulani culture may have been present in the area of Tassili n’Ajjer.[90] The Agades cross, a fertility amulet worn by Fulani women, may be associated with the hexagon-shaped carnelian piece of jewelry depicted in the rock art at Tin Felki.[90] At Tin Tazarift, the depiction of a finger may allude to the hand of the mythic figure, Kikala, the first Fulani pastoralist.[90][91] At Uan Derbuaen rockshelter of eastern Tassili, composition six may depict a white ox, under the spell of serpent-related animals, crossing through a U-shaped gate of vegetation, toward a powerful benevolent figure, in order to undo the spell on the ox.[92] Composition six has been interpreted as portraying the Lotori ceremonial rite of Sub-Saharan West African Fulani herders.[92] The annual Lotori ceremonial rite, held by Fulani herders, occurs at a selected location and period of time,[93] and commemorates the ox and its origination in a source of water.[16][90] The Lotori ceremonial rite promotes good health (e.g., prevent epizooties, prevent illness, prevent sterility)[93][92] and reproductive success of cattle by having the cattle cross through a gate of vegetation, and thus, the continuity of the pastoral wealth of the nomadic pastoralist Fulani.[93] The interpretation of composition six as portraying the Lotori ceremonial rite, along with other forms of evidence, have been used to support the conclusion that modern Sub-Saharan West African Fulani herders are descended from peoples of the Sahara.[92]

Following the northward expansion from coastal West Africa refugia, West African hunter-gatherers arrived and began dwelling at the Korounkorokale rockshelter, in Pays Mande, Mali, where they engaged in hunting and fishing.[4] By 4000 BCE, red ocher, used to paint pottery, jewelry, or pictographs, was developed by West African hunter-gatherers, which may have developed as a result of interaction with populations from lake areas to the northeast.[4] With the increased use of grinded stones, and thus, cultural development of utilizing vegetation for food, this resulted in a decreased use of stone projectiles, and thus, decreased hunting cultural practices.[4] By 700 CE, along with Niani having been established, Korounkorokale was embedded within the Kingdom of Kangaba.[4] West African hunter-gatherers and their ancient cultural traditions may have persisted shortly thereafter, as West African hunter-gatherers became fully acculturated, and Malinke metallurgy and pottery traditions became predominant.[4]

As a result of aridification of the Green Sahara, West Africans may have adapted by domesticating animals (e.g., Helmeted guineafowl) and plants (e.g., Pearl millet, African rice, Yams).[27] West Africa may have been a major regional cradle in Africa for the domestication of crops and animals.[27] Between 5889 BP and 3685 BP, West Africans domesticated pearl millet.[27] Between 5500 BP and 1300 BP, West Africans domesticated the Helmeted guineafowl.[27] Between 3200 BP and 2000 BP, West Africans domesticated African rice.[27]

During the Holocene, the Green Sahara underwent the process of becoming a desert and became the Sahara; this occurrence may have contributed to the start of domesticating field crops.[28] Akin to the Fertile Crescent of the Near East, the Niger River region of West Africa served as a cradle for field crop domestication and agriculture in Africa.[28] Yams, rice, sorghum, pearl millet, and cowpea are field crops that originate in Africa.[28] Domesticating of yams (e.g., D. praehensilis) likely began in the basin of the Niger River between eastern Ghana and western Nigeria (e.g., northern Benin).[28] Domesticating of rice (e.g., Oryza glaberrima) likely began in the Inner Niger Delta region of Mali.[28] Domesticating of pearl millet (e.g., Cenchrus americanus) likely began in the region of northern Mali and Mauritania.[28] Domesticating of cowpeas likely began in the region of northern Ghana.[28]

Before 5500 BP, Kordofanian hunters may have traversed from West Africa, along the Yellow Nile River (Wadi Howar), into the Nuba Hills.[14]

5500 BP – 4500 BP (3500 BCE – 2500 BCE) edit

 
West African sites with archaeobotanical remains from third to first millennium BC. The arrows indicate pearl millet diffusion into sub-Saharan West Africa.

Herders from the Central Sahara migrated southward toward areas more fit for pastoralism, as the Green Sahara became increasingly dry after 3500 BCE.[94] Seasonal waterways were the likely migratory route taken, by hunter-gatherers and cattle herders, to the Niger River and Chad Basin.[21] Dwelling in the Sahelian region began to occur as long inhabited settlement and funerary sites of the northern region of Niger stopped being used.[21] Migration of Central Saharan peoples into the Sahelian region of Sub-Saharan Africa is verified via Saharan influenced pottery that appear in the Sahelian region.[21] Herders from the Sahara expanded, along with their cord-wrapped, roulette-detailed ceramic culture and the agricultural practice of pearl millet, throughout West Africa.[39] Saharan roulette-detailed ceramics may be associated with herding cultures from southern Algeria or pre-herding cultures from Niger.[39] After the first half of the 3rd millennium BCE, domesticated pearl millet emerged for the first time near the Saharan and Sahelian regional boundary, thereafter, it expanded into the Sahelian and West Sudanian savanna regional boundary of Sub-Saharan Africa.[39] In adaptation to desertification, Saharan herders developed agriculture as an additional subsistence strategy.[39] As an adaptation to the desertification of the Sahara amid the Green Sahara period, Saharan herders may have begun increasingly utilizing undomesticated flora near seasonally developed and local water sources (e.g., streams, ponds), and thus, contributed to the increased utilization and agricultural spread of pearl millet.[39] After 2500 BCE, desertification of the Green Sahara may have resulted in Saharan herders traversing further south in West Africa.[39] In 2000 BCE, amid the Later Stone Age, "Thiaroye Woman",[22] also known as the "Venus of Thiaroye,"[22][23] may have been the earliest statuette created in Sub-Saharan West Africa; it may have particularly been a fertility statuette, created in the region of Senegambia;[23] the Thiaroye figure, which was found among quartz, flint, and ceramic fragments and atop a tumulus, may be associated with the emergence of complexly organized pastoral societies in West Africa between 4000 BCE and 1000 BCE.[24] Amid the 2nd millennium BCE, agriculture, likely along with cord-wrapped, roulette-detailed ceramics, spread throughout the Sahelian and West Sudanian savanna regions of West Africa.[39] Cultural experience with the desertification of the Green Sahara may have contributed to adept adjustment to the drying of the Sahelian and West Sudanian savanna regions of Sub-Saharan Africa by agropastoralists.[39] Agropastoralists, as early agriculturalists, who likely originated in the Central Sahara, began to migrate southward into these regions around 2200 BCE.[39] Agropastoralists traversed through Tilemsi Valley and Ounjougou.[95] Additional adaptations to desertification of the southern Sahara may have been the development of transhumance, which was engaged in seasonally among some agricultural herders, and the increased development of cord-wrapped roulette-detailed ceramics in Sub-Saharan Africa, which likely was first developed in the early period of the Holocene in the Central Sahara.[39] While also hunting and gathering, agropastoralists engaged in agriculture on a seasonal basis.[73] Earlier subsistence strategies involved a combined approach (e.g., agriculture, pastoralism, hunting, foraging).[73] Later, migratory herding, which is solely reliant on pastoralism, developed, and divergence between modern migratory herders and settled agriculturalists occurred.[73] After 1400 BCE and before 800 BCE the spread of agriculture may have been altered, and greening of the western Sahel occurred amid the 2nd millennium BCE.[39] Spread of domesticated pearl millet may reached Lake Chad, via eastern spread from the Niger River or an alternative avenue from the Central Sahara.[39] Increased dryness began to recur after 800 BCE in West Africa and Central Africa.[39] Amid the 1st millennium BCE, agriculture spread, not only near Lake Chad, but near the Niger Delta, Senegal Valley, Jos Plateau, and the southern region of Cameroon.[39]

Due to the complexity of pottery patterns and vastness of the area, where interactions between peoples occurred during the mid-Holocene, specifying which linguistic group (e.g., Niger-Congo, Nilo-Saharan, Afroasiatic) is the first settling population is challenging.[96] In any case, pottery in Gajiganna shares cultural similarity, across nearby areas of the southern Sahara, most of all, with northwestern Niger and northwestern Sudan.[96] Pottery from sites, dated to the second millennium BCE, close to the Mandara Mountains in Cameroon and Nigeria, also share affinity with the ceramics in Gajiganna.[96]

Amid the middle of the Holocene, West African hunter-gatherers continued to dwell along the rivers and within the forests of coastal West Africa.[8] West African hunter-gatherer stone industries had little presence to the north of the West Sudanian savanna and Sahel boundary, which may indicate that it served as a type of natural environmental barricade to their greatly mobile hunter-gatherer lifestyle.[8] Increased use of ceramics among West African hunter-gatherers also occurred, as evidenced by ceramics dated to 5370 ± 100 BP in Bosumpra Cave, Ghana and ceramics dated to 4180 ± 160 BP in Mbi Crater, Cameroon.[8] While likely still maintaining their hunter-gatherer culture, West African hunter-gatherers may have increasingly utilized local flora (e.g., palm oil, tubers).[8]

At Khant,[23] where people may have started dwelling in 5000 BP,[97] the Neolithic human skeletal remnants of a tall, middle-aged man was found; the remnants possessed traits closer to other Sudanese of the Neolithic era than modern Senegambians.[23]

Watermelons, which may originate in West Africa, may have spread into North Africa[98] (e.g., seeds dated to 5000 BP at Uan Muhuggiag in southwestern Libya,[98][99] Tutankhamun burial tomb in ancient Egypt) via trade between West Africans and North Africans or may have spread into North Africa naturally amid the Green Sahara (e.g., Pleistocene, Holocene).[98]

West African ancestors may have diverged into distinct ancestral groups of modern West Africans and Bantu-speaking peoples in Cameroon, and, subsequently, around 5000 BP, the Bantu-speaking peoples migrated into other parts of Sub-Saharan Africa (e.g., Central African Republic, African Great Lakes, South Africa).[45]

From Western Africa, the Bantu-speaking peoples, along with their ceramics, expanded into the rest of Sub-Saharan Africa.[100] The Kalundu ceramic type may have expanded into Southeastern Africa.[100] Additionally, the Eastern African Urewe ceramic type of Lake Victoria may have expanded, via African shores near the Indian Ocean, as the Kwale ceramic type, and expanded, via Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Malawi, as the Nkope ceramic type.[100]

As a result of the migrations of Niger-Congo speakers (e.g., Bantu expansion), polyrhythmic culture (e.g., dance, music), which is generally associated with being a common trait among modern cultures of Africa, spread throughout Africa.[101] Due to the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, music of the African diaspora, many of whom descend from Niger-Congo speakers, has had considerable influence upon modern Western forms of popular culture (e.g., dance, music).[101]

In the Aïr Mountains region of Niger, copper was independently smelted between 3000 BCE and 2500 BCE.[102] The quality of the smelting process being used was not well developed, thereby, indicating that it was not introduced into the Aïr Mountains from an external region, such as the Nile Valley.[102] By 1500 BCE, the quality of the smelting process became more developed.[102]

4500 BP – 3500 BP (2500 BCE – 1500 BCE) edit

The savanna and forest of West Africa and savanna and forest of Central Africa are the areas that chimpanzees originate and dwell.[103] As such, though rather speculative, by the 2nd millennium BCE, chimpanzees and/or their artistic depictions (e.g., “seated” and “crouched” chimpanzee statuettes developed between 2300 BCE and 1500 BCE) may have been exchanged in a long-distance trade network from West Africa or Central Africa, through East Africa (e.g., Elmenteitan) and Arabia, into the Near East (e.g., Elam).[103] Another possibility (as via report of Hanno the Navigator) is that, via maritime trade from the Gulf of Guinea, to the eastern region of the Mediterranean, along the Incense Route, into the Near East.[103] Additionally, it may have been traded from West Africa, via pathways through North Africa and Rome in the 2nd century CE, into the Near East.[103]

From 4500 BP, Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan speakers in West Africa came into frequent contact with diverse Afroasiatic immigrants from Northeast Africa as well as speakers of a 'vanished language' to the south as aridity pressed populations into close proximity.[8]

During the Copper Age and early Islamic era of ancient Israel, West Africans may have migrated into ancient Israel and introduced head louse from West Africa.[104]

In 4000 BP, there may have been a population that traversed from Africa (e.g., West Africa or West-Central Africa), through the Strait of Gibraltar, into the Iberian peninsula, where admixing between Africans and Iberians (e.g., of northern Portugal, of southern Spain) occurred.[105]

After migrating from the Central Sahara, by 4000 BP, the Mande peoples of West Africa established their agropastoral civilization of Tichitt[9] in the Western Sahara.[106] The painted Pastoral rock art of Tassili n'Ajjer, Algeria and engraved Pastoral rock art of Niger bear resemblance (e.g., color markings of the cattle) with the engraved cattle portrayed in the Dhar Tichitt rock art in Akreijit.[107] The engraved cattle pastoral rock art of Dhar Tichitt, which are displayed in enclosed areas that may have been used to pen cattle, is supportive evidence for cattle bearing ritualistic significance for the peoples of Dhar Tichitt.[107] The considerable commonalities, absent in modern North African cultures, are present and able to be found between Round Head paintings and modern Sub-Saharan African cultures.[108] Saharan ceramics are viewed as having clear likeness with the oldest ceramics found in Djenne-Djenno, which have been dated to 250 BCE.[108] The egalitarian civilization of Djenne-Djenno was likely established by the Mande progenitors of the Bozo people, which spanned from the 3rd century BCE to the 13th century CE.[109]

By 4000 BP, interaction between Saharan occupants and Sub-Saharan West African hunter-gatherers increased as Saharan occupants increasingly migrated southward into Sub-Saharan West Africa.[8] As desertification was underway, West African hunter-gatherers of the Middle Niger were likely the first to encounter southward migrating Saharan occupants.[8] Increased interaction may have resulted in the adoption of pottery and production of polished stone production, which, subsequently, may have led to these cultural practices being further diffused unto other West African hunter-gatherers.[8] Additionally, pastoralism may have been adopted by some West African hunter-gatherers.[8] As West African hunter-gatherers of the Middle Niger became increasingly acculturated and eventually admixed into more numerous, surrounding southward migrating Saharan occupants, some West African hunter-gatherers, further south, may have continued their hunting-gathering and/or basic vegetable cultivation cultures.[8] Eventually, even these socially organized West African hunter-gatherers, were likely acculturated and admixed into the more numerous, surrounding West Africans from the Sahara.[8]

 
An example of a microlith projectile point, a very small stone tool. The shape of this one is similar to the ones that have been discovered at Kintampo sites.

Desertification of the Green Sahara resulted in the migration of Saharan pastoralists and agropastoralists south of the Sahelian region.[8] Consequently, seasonal interaction likely occurred between Saharan pastoralists and agropastoralists and West African hunter-gatherers, who also practiced basic agriculture via vegetable cultivation.[8] Sites in Ghana (e.g., Ntereso, Kintampo, Daboya) provide an example of group contact in 3500 BP, as evidenced by Punpun microlithic industries that appear in close proximity to Saharan projectile points, beads, stone innovations (e.g., stone arm rings, small stone axes), and livestock.[8] Rather than Saharan pastoralists and agropastoralists replacing West African hunter-gatherers, there apparently was a merger of groups, as at Kintampo, there was evidence of adaptation to the subsistence conditions of the forest-savanna region of West Africa.[8]

Domesticated crops (e.g., pearl millet, cowpea, large amounts of oil palm) and undomesticated flora were availed in rockshelters (e.g., B-sites, K6), near the Guinean forest-savanna mosaic, in the southern region of central Ghana.[110] West African agriculturalists of Kintampo and West African hunter-gatherers of Punpun were migratory peoples, who settled at the sites seasonally for various reasons (e.g., oil palm production); this is evidenced by the varied way in which flora are situated at the rockshelters.[110] West African hunter-gatherers may have migrated southward near the forest region or scattered into smaller groups amid arid seasons.[110] Various activities (e.g., production of local resources) occurred in partially settled areas of the savanna and forest regions.[110] After 4500 BP, desertification may have resulted in Saharan peoples migrating toward the south.[110] The southern parts of the forest region, near Kintampo, may have been unfit for the subsistence techniques of farming domesticated crops (e.g., pearl millet) from the region of North Africa.[110] As a result, subsistence techniques were adapted to the natural environment of the forest region, and local crops (e.g., oil palm, yams), may have been introduced into what was usually farmed.[110] Successful adaptation to the local ecology seems to have occurred, from the southern part of the forest region to the coastal region of West Africa.[110] West African agriculturalists likely formed mutual relations with the West African hunter-gatherers.[110] As a result of these relations, West African hunter-gatherers,[110] who also practiced basic agriculture via vegetable cultivation,[8] likely provided West African agriculturalists with oil-rich and Vitamin A-rich nuts as part of their local food source.[110] Additionally, West African agriculturalists may have acquired forest subsistence knowledge and strategies from West African hunter-gatherers.[110]

As early as 4000 BP, the engraved petroglyphs of Burkina Faso began to be created.[111] Rockshelters and barns were utilized by the creators of the engraved petroglyphs.[111] The engraved rock art was composed of floral radiant circles, anthropomorphs, lizards and herbivores, and streaks/striations and a single spiral-headed cat.[111] Anthropomorphs may have been the engraved image of a face composed plant and tree leaves as well as another possible engraved image of a face; one figure may have a hat and ten figures may have been wielding spears, and there may have been a few butterflies.[111] Floral radiant circles (cupules within circles).[111] At Dokiti, there are hundreds of radiant circles as well as images of what may be woodworms in wood and spindly monkeys.[111] Mortars and grindstones as well as a linear arranged set of cupules within a cave with a rock in the center, which could have served as a ceremonial altar, were also found at an archaeological site.[111] From a nearby village, potsherds and more fifty stone circles were created and utilized by Neolithic Africans, who were also likely the creators of the engraved rock art.[111]

From 1700 BCE to 500 BCE, Terracotta net weights were used at Kolima South, Méma, Mali.[112]

In the mid-4th millennium BP, four "Negroid" individuals occupied Kintampo, in Ghana.[113][114][115]

Iron metallurgy may have been developed independently in West Africa.[31][32] Archaeological sites containing iron smelting furnaces and slag have been excavated at sites in the Nsukka region of southeast Nigeria in what is now Igboland: dating to 2000 BC at the site of Lejja (Eze-Uzomaka 2009)[32][33] and to 750 BC and at the site of Opi (Holl 2009).[32][34] Iron metallurgy sites are known in the Nok culture from between the 9th century BCE and 550 BCE.[35] More recently, Bandama and Babalola (2023) have indicated that iron metallurgical development occurred 2631 BCE – 2458 BCE at Lejja, in Nigeria, 2136 BCE – 1921 BCE at Oboui, in Central Africa Republic, 1895 BCE – 1370 BCE at Tchire Ouma 147, in Niger, and 1297 BCE – 1051 BCE at Dekpassanware, in Togo.[36]

3500 BP – 2500 BP (1500 BCE – 500 BCE) edit

In 1500 BCE, Mande speakers may have first domesticated African rice (Oryza glaberrima) and established the cultivation systems in the mid-region of the Niger River.[116] Subsequently, West Atlantic speakers may have domesticated rice, utilizing irrigation systems with mangroves, near the Casamance and Sine-Saloum rivers.[116]

In Sub-Saharan West Africa, there is rock art.[117] At Igbara Oke, in proximity to Akure, Nigeria, there are engraved geometric (e.g., triangle) and fish rock art.[117] In Bauchi State, Nigeria, there is rock art at the Shira and Geji sites; two rock art traditions at Shira are dark reddish monochrome-colored anthropomorphous and realistic (e.g., lactating cattle and their calves, humans) depictions and Geji has a painted depiction of a horse, which may show that Geji rock art does not date earlier than the 15th century BCE.[117] Other rock art in the northern region of Nigeria includes sites in several villages of Marghi, in Borno State and Birnin Kudu, in Jigawa State.[117] The anthropomorphous depictions (e.g., a red-, black-, and white-colored cow; short-horned and long-horned humpless cattle, which may predate the presence of humped cattle in the northern region of Nigeria and may be at least a thousand years old) at Birnin Kudu are distinct from the reddish colored depictions (e.g., 1 antelope and 2 humpless long-horned cows of outlined and striped rock art design; 1 horse, 1 unidentified portrayal, and 8 humpless long-horned cows of outlined rock art design; 2 men, 2 monkeys, 5 humpless long-horned cows, and 6 unidentified portrayals, and 11 antelopes of solid-colored painted rock art design) at Geji, and the depictions (e.g., humans, animals) at Marghi are associated with initiation and marital rites.[117]

 
Senegambian megaliths

Between 1350 BCE and 1500/1600 CE, Senegambian megaliths (e.g., tumuli) were constructed for the purpose of ancestral reverence.[118]

With exception to some parts of West Africa (e.g., Ntereso, Kintampo), prior to the late first millennium BCE, West African hunter-gatherers, who were the most widely spread cultural group of socially organized populations, were likely the only group to populate the forest and savanna regions of West Africa.[4] The expansion of West African hunter-gatherers north, toward the Sahelian region of the Middle Niger, led to interaction with populations from further north.[4] Prior to initial encounter with migrating populations from further north, West African hunter-gatherers may have already engaged in basic agricultural production of tubers as well as utilizing Elaeis guineensis and Canarium schweinfurthii.[4] After interaction began, some West African hunter-gatherers may have acquired knowledge of pottery and polished stone production, which then spread further southward onto other West African hunter-gatherers, while others may have acquired knowledge of pastoralism.[4] Continued interaction may have resulted in further acculturation (e.g., loss of West African hunter-gatherer languages).[4] Isolated groups of West African hunter-gatherers may have continually dwelled throughout the region of the Pays Mande mountains after the development of metallurgy.[4] West African hunter-gatherers may have even adopted, culturally adapted metallurgical practices, while still maintaining their ancient stone industrial traditions.[4] Cultural continuity, via stone industries of isolated West African hunter-gatherers from the forest-savanna region, has been found throughout West Africa as late as the end of first millennium CE.[8] In Sopie FkBvl, Liberia, quartz microliths have been dated to 2360 ± 125 BP.[8] Kamabai Shelter, in Sierra Leone, had quartz microliths dated to 1190 ± 95 BP.[8] In Mali, quartz microliths were dated to 1430 ± 80 BP in Nyamanko and dated to 1020 ± 105 BP in Korounkorokale.[8] Kariya Wuro, in Nigeria, had quartz microliths dated to 950 ± 30 BP.[8] After having persisted as late as the end of first millennium CE,[4] or 1000 BP,[8] many of the remaining West African hunter-gatherers were likely ultimately acculturated and admixed into the larger groups of West African agriculturalists, akin to the migratory Bantu-speaking agriculturalists and their encounters with Central African hunter-gatherers.[8]

According to the Western Sudanic oral tradition compiled by Yoro Dyâo (1847-1919) in the late 19th century CE, six migrations were stated to have occurred from the Nile Valley to West Africa between the 7th century BCE and the 6th century CE. These oral traditions support a Nile Valley origin for the people and cultures of the Western Sudan. The Soninké, Songhay, Lebu, Tucoleur, Akan, and Fulani are some of the West African populations that indicated to have derived from these migrations. Each migration was started by either an invasion of the region by foreigners or the oppression of the invader regime on the indigenous population.[119][120][121]

According to Anne Mayor, migrations occurred from the Sahel and Sahara into the West African Savanna, from the first millennium BCE to the first millennium CE, likely due to aridification, resulting in significant contributions being made to the overall protohistoric peopling of the Niger Bend.[122] One migration originated from the northwest with the complex societies (e.g., Dhar Tichitt) of Mauritania and is associated with corded roulette ceramics. The other migration from the northeast consisted of iron metallurgists from Niger who spread concave matting techniques for ceramics into West Africa that originated along the Sudano-Tchadian border.[122] Peoples of the Niger Bend practiced “fishing, hunting, herding, agriculture, iron metallurgy, interregional (or even long-distance) commerce, and sometimes – hierarchical social organization.”[122]

A comparative archeological analysis of artifacts at the Cairo Museum and the Theodore Monod Museum of African art in Dakar, Senegal reveals a deep material culture kinship between contemporary West Africans and the Pharaonic civilization that has traversed space and time.[123]

Contrary to the popular academic myth of North Africans (e.g., Garamantes) engaging in the chariot-driven capture, enslavement, and trade of Sub-Saharan West Africans during classical antiquity, there were equitable transactions of materials (e.g., gold) made between Sub-Saharan West Africans and North Africans (e.g., Carthaginians).[124]

2500 BP – 1500 BP (500 BCE – 500 CE) edit

In 400 BCE or 300 BCE, as the Green Sahara underwent desertification, agropastoralists migrated in different directions from the eastern region of Mauritania.[125] Some may have migrated southward and became the agropastoral Bafour peoples, and some may have migrated northward and became the agricultural Haratine peoples.[125]

In Itaakpa rockshelter, Nigeria, human remains (e.g., mandible, maxilla), which are similar to human remains from Shum Laka, Cameroon, and, along with ceramics and African oil palm (Elaeis guineensis), are dated to 2210 ± 80 BP.[126]

Between 2000 BP and 1500 BP, Nilo-Saharan speakers may have migrated across the Sahel, from East Africa into West Africa, and admixed with Niger-Congo-speaking Berom people.[127] In 710 CE, West African-related populations (e.g., Niger-Congo-speaking Berom people, Bantu-speakers) and East African-related populations (Nilo-Saharan-speaking Ethiopians, Nilo-Saharan-speaking Chadians) admixed with one another in northern Nigeria and northern Cameroon.[128]

In 1990 BP, a "Negroid" agriculturalist (indicated via dental evidence from the skeletal remains) occupied Rop rock shelter, in the northern region of Nigeria.[113]

At the Akumbu mound complex, in Mema, Mali, its findings date between 400 CE and 1400 CE; at the cultural deposit of AK3, which contained three human remains, the dates range between 400 CE and 600 CE.[129] While two out of three human remains were in a fully decomposed state, one of the human remains were able to be determined to be a young adult (17-25 years old) female, who was buried with two copper bracelets - one on each wrist, 13 cowrie shells, 11 stone beads, and a fully intact pot.[129]

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prehistoric, west, africa, prehistory, west, africa, spans, from, earliest, human, presence, region, until, emergence, iron, west, africa, west, african, populations, were, considerably, mobile, interacted, with, another, throughout, population, history, west,. The prehistory of West Africa spans from the earliest human presence in the region until the emergence of the Iron Age in West Africa West African populations were considerably mobile and interacted with one another throughout the population history of West Africa 2 Acheulean tool using archaic humans may have dwelled throughout West Africa since at least between 780 000 BP and 126 000 BP Middle Pleistocene 3 During the Pleistocene Middle Stone Age peoples e g Iwo Eleru people 4 possibly Aterians who dwelled throughout West Africa between MIS 4 71 000 BP and MIS 2 29 000 BP Last Glacial Maximum 5 were gradually replaced by incoming Late Stone Age peoples who migrated into West Africa 6 as an increase in humid conditions resulted in the subsequent expansion of the West African forest 7 West African hunter gatherers occupied western Central Africa e g Shum Laka earlier than 32 000 BP 4 dwelled throughout coastal West Africa by 12 000 BP 8 and migrated northward between 12 000 BP and 8000 BP as far as Mali Burkina Faso 8 and Mauritania 9 Round Head rock art figures and zoomorphic figures including a Barbary sheep 1 During the Holocene Niger Congo speakers independently created pottery in Ounjougou Mali 10 11 12 the earliest pottery in Africa 13 by at least 9400 BCE 10 and along with their pottery 13 as well as wielding independently invented bows and arrows 14 15 migrated into the Central Sahara 13 which became their primary region of residence by 10 000 BP 14 The emergence and expansion of ceramics in the Sahara may be linked with the origin of Round Head and Kel Essuf rock art which occupy rockshelters in the same regions e g Djado Acacus Tadrart 16 Hunters in the Central Sahara farmed stored and cooked undomesticated central Saharan flora 17 underwent domestication of antelope 18 and domesticated and shepherded Barbary sheep 17 After the Kel Essuf Period and Round Head Period of the Central Sahara the Pastoral Period followed 19 Some of the hunter gatherers who created the Round Head rock art may have adopted pastoral culture and others may have not 20 As a result of increasing aridification of the Green Sahara Central Saharan hunter gatherers and cattle herders may have used seasonal waterways as the migratory route taken to the Niger River and Chad Basin of West Africa 21 In 2000 BCE Thiaroye Woman 22 also known as the Venus of Thiaroye 22 23 may have been the earliest statuette created in Sub Saharan West Africa it may have particularly been a fertility statuette created in the region of Senegambia 23 and may be associated with the emergence of complexly organized pastoral societies in West Africa between 4000 BCE and 1000 BCE 24 Though possibly developed as early as 5000 BCE 25 Nsibidi may have also developed in 2000 BCE 25 26 as evidenced by depictions of the West African script on Ikom monoliths at Ikom in Nigeria 25 Migration of Saharan peoples south of the Sahelian region resulted in seasonal interaction with and gradual absorption of West African hunter gatherers who primarily dwelt in the savannas and forests of West Africa 8 In West Africa which may have been a major regional cradle in Africa for the domestication of crops and animals 27 28 Niger Congo speakers domesticated the helmeted guineafowl 29 between 5500 BP and 1300 BP 27 domestication of field crops occurred throughout various locations in West Africa such as yams Dioscorea praehensilis in the Niger River basin between eastern Ghana and western Nigeria northern Benin rice oryza glaberrima in the Inner Niger Delta region of Mali pearl millet Cenchrus americanus in northern Mali and Mauritania and cowpeas in northern Ghana 28 After having persisted as late as 1000 BP 8 or some period of time after 1500 CE 30 remaining West African hunter gatherers many of whom dwelt in the forest savanna region were ultimately acculturated and admixed into the larger groups of West African agriculturalists akin to the migratory Bantu speaking agriculturalists and their encounters with Central African hunter gatherers 8 Iron metallurgy may have been developed independently in West Africa 31 32 sometime between around 3 000 1 000 BC with archaeological sites containing iron smelting furnaces found at sites at Lejja Nigeria Eze Uzomaka 2009 32 33 Opi Holl 2009 32 34 the Nok culture 35 Oboui and others 36 Contents 1 Climate 1 1 Early Stone Age 1 2 Middle Stone Age 1 3 Later Stone Age 1 4 Pastoral Neolithic 2 Early Stone Age 3 Middle Stone Age 4 Later Stone Age 4 1 32 000 BP 20 000 BP 30 000 BCE 18 000 BCE 4 2 20 000 BP 10 000 BP 18 000 BCE 8000 BCE 4 3 10 000 BP 7500 BP 8000 BCE 5500 BCE 5 Pastoral Neolithic 5 1 7500 BP 6500 BP 5500 BCE 4500 BCE 5 2 6500 BP 5500 BP 4500 BCE 3500 BCE 5 3 5500 BP 4500 BP 3500 BCE 2500 BCE 5 4 4500 BP 3500 BP 2500 BCE 1500 BCE 5 5 3500 BP 2500 BP 1500 BCE 500 BCE 5 6 2500 BP 1500 BP 500 BCE 500 CE 6 ReferencesClimate editFurther information Climate of Africa nbsp West African monsoon season Early Stone Age edit In the Faleme River Valley zone with the exception of stadial phases and interstadial phases there has been a fairly steady state of humidity and temperature throughout a span of 120 000 years 37 Additionally for at least the previous 100 000 years the presence of flora e g trees has remained quite consistent 37 Consequently this area has remained habitable for human populations from the Early Stone Age through the Middle Stone Age to the Later Stone Age 37 Furthermore for the previous 100 000 years compared to the climate of East Africa the Pleistocene climate in West Africa has been more steady and humid 37 In the Atakora mountainous zone the Pleistocene climate has supported continuity in human habitation from the Early Stone Age through the Middle Stone Age to the Later Stone Age which spanned the previous 120 000 years 37 Middle Stone Age edit In the Faleme River Valley zone with the exception of stadial phases and interstadial phases there has been a fairly steady state of humidity and temperature throughout a span of 120 000 years 37 Additionally for at least the previous 100 000 years the presence of flora e g trees has remained quite consistent 37 Consequently this area has remained habitable for human populations from the Early Stone Age through the Middle Stone Age to the Later Stone Age 37 Furthermore for the previous 100 000 years compared to the climate of East Africa the Pleistocene climate in West Africa has been more steady and humid 37 In the Jos Plateau zone the Pleistocene climate has fluctuated mostly during stadial phases and interstadial phases throughout the previous 120 000 years specifically stable climate occurred between MIS 4 and MIS 2 and climate fluctuations occurred during the periods and sub periods of MIS 1 and MIS 5 37 Consequently the human habitation areas in Jos Plateau which is only composed of Middle Stone Age sites has been distinct in terms of culture and environment in comparison to the Faleme River Valley 37 In the Atakora mountainous zone the Pleistocene climate has supported continuity in human habitation from the Early Stone Age through the Middle Stone Age to the Later Stone Age which spanned the previous 120 000 years 37 Later Stone Age edit In the Faleme River Valley zone with the exception of stadial phases and interstadial phases there has been a fairly steady state of humidity and temperature throughout a span of 120 000 years 37 Additionally for at least the previous 100 000 years the presence of flora e g trees has remained quite consistent 37 Consequently this area has remained habitable for human populations from the Early Stone Age through the Middle Stone Age to the Later Stone Age 37 Furthermore for the previous 100 000 years compared to the climate of East Africa the Pleistocene climate in West Africa has been more steady and humid 37 In the Atakora mountainous zone the Pleistocene climate has supported continuity in human habitation from the Early Stone Age through the Middle Stone Age to the Later Stone Age which spanned the previous 120 000 years 37 In 15 000 BP the West African monsoon transformed the landscape of Africa and began the Green Sahara period greater rainfall during the summer season resulted in the growth of humid conditions e g lakes wetlands and the savanna e g grassland shrubland in North Africa 38 Between 5500 BP and 4000 BP the Green Sahara period ended 38 During the 1st millennium cal BCE between the Later Stone Age and Early Iron Age the environment was conducive for the growth of pearl millet in the basin area of Lake Chad 39 Pastoral Neolithic edit By 4500 BP sources of water in the Sahara had dried and subsequently drought occurred which resulted in a decrease in the presence of humidity in the region 39 Concurrent with the decrease in Saharan humidity between 3500 BP and 2500 BP the Sahel underwent an increase in humidity within the region 39 Early Stone Age editAcheulean tool using archaic humans may have dwelled throughout West Africa since at least between 780 000 BP and 126 000 BP Middle Pleistocene 3 At Ounjougou in Mali a yet to be dated Lower Paleolithic economy e g pebble cores pebble tools polyhedrons spheroids sub spheroids with unpreserved Acheulean implements e g cleavers handaxes is present 40 Middle Stone Age edit nbsp nbsp Iwo Eleru site and Iwo Eleru skull Middle Stone Age West Africans may have dwelled at Ounjougou Mali 71 000 BP 59 000 BP 59 000 BP 28 000 BP Faleme Valley Senegal Late MIS 5 Tiemassas Senegal 62 000 BP 25 000 BP 5 7 Birimi Ghana 50 000 BP 20 000 BP 7 Missira Senegal MIS 4 5 Toumboura Senegal 33 000 BP 5 7 Laminia Gambia 24 000 BP 21 000 BP 7 Ndiayene Pendao Senegal 11 600 BP 5 7 and Saxonomunya 11 000 BP near Faleme Mali 7 There is also scant evidence of Middle Stone Age settlement at Ounjougou Mali between 191 000 BP 130 000 BP 5 Aside the scant evidence Middle Stone Age West Africans likely dwelled continuously in West Africa between MIS 4 and MIS 2 and likely were not present in West Africa before MIS 5 5 Amid MIS 5 Middle Stone Age West Africans may have migrated across the West Sudanian savanna and continued to reside in the region e g West Sudanian savanna West African Sahel 5 In the Late Pleistocene Middle Stone Age West Africans began to dwell along parts of the forest and coastal region of West Africa e g Tiemassas Senegal 5 More specifically by at least 61 000 BP Middle Stone Age West Africans may have begun to migrate south of the West Sudanian savanna and by at least 25 000 BP may have begun to dwell near the coast of West Africa 5 Amid aridification in MIS 5 and regional change of climate in MIS 4 in the Sahara and the Sahel Aterians may have migrated southward into West Africa e g Baie du Levrier Mauritania Tiemassas Senegal Lower Senegal River Valley 5 In 35 000 BP Middle Stone Age West Africans and West African archaic humans may have admixed with one another resulting in the development of the Iwo Eleru people e g Iwo Eleru skull who may have remained rather isolated in West Africa and thus remained distinct from both contemporaneous Africans in the Sahara and from any other African populations amid the transitory period between the Pleistocene and Holocene 41 Later Stone Age edit32 000 BP 20 000 BP 30 000 BCE 18 000 BCE edit nbsp Representations of West African hunter gatherers from the Dahomey region of Benin Earlier than 32 000 BP 4 or by 30 000 BP 7 8 Late Stone Age West African hunter gatherers were dwelling in the forests of western Central Africa 7 8 e g earlier than 32 000 BP at de Maret in Shum Laka 4 12 000 BP at Mbi Crater 8 An excessively dry Ogolian period occurred spanning from 20 000 BP to 12 000 BP 4 By 15 000 BP the number of settlements made by Middle Stone Age West Africans decreased as there was an increase in humid conditions expansion of the West African forest and increase in the number of settlements made by Late Stone Age West African hunter gatherers 7 Macrolith using late Middle Stone Age peoples e g the possibly archaic human admixed 6 or late persisting early modern human 42 43 Iwo Eleru fossils of the late Middle Stone Age who dwelled in Central Africa to western Central Africa to West Africa were displaced by microlith using Late Stone Age Africans e g non archaic human admixed Late Stone Age Shum Laka fossils dated between 7000 BP and 3000 BP as they migrated from Central Africa to western Central Africa into West Africa 6 Between 16 000 BP and 12 000 BP Late Stone Age West Africans began dwelling in the eastern and central forested regions e g Ghana Ivory Coast Nigeria 7 between 18 000 BP and 13 000 BP at Temet West and Asokrochona in the southern region of Ghana 13 050 230 BP at Bingerville in the southern region of Ivory Coast 11 200 200 BP at Iwo Eleru in Nigeria 8 of West Africa 7 By 11 000 BP the late settlement made by Middle Stone Age West Africans and earliest settlement made by Late Stone Age West African hunter gatherers emerged in the westernmost region e g Faleme Valley Senegal of West Africa 7 Middle Stone Age West Africans and Late Stone Age West African hunter gatherers likely did not become admixed with one another and were culturally and ecologically distinct from one another 7 20 000 BP 10 000 BP 18 000 BCE 8000 BCE edit nbsp Africa in 12 000 BCE According to MacDonald 2003 the regional birthplace of Nilo Saharan speakers and Niger Congo speakers spanned from the Nile Valley to the Maghreb after the Aterian period 8 In 20 000 BP amid the Late Pleistocene Proto Niger Saharan speakers who are identified as Mechtoids persisted along the coasts and in the mountainous areas of North Africa 8 Between 12 000 BP and 10 000 BP amid the Holocene Niger Saharan speakers migrated southward into the Sahara and linguistic divergence began to increase subsequently they gradually encountered assimilated and absorbed West African populations that persisted along coastal West Africa 8 Libyco Berber epigraphy while possibly being composed in playfulness as a form of code or as an unknown language unrelated to modern Berber languages may have also been composed in a Nilo Saharan language 44 As of 19 000 years ago Africans bearing haplogroup E1b1a V38 likely traversed across the Sahara from east to west 45 Around 18 000 BP the ancestors of Mende people along with Gambian peoples grew in population size 46 The Taforalts of Morocco who have been radiocarbon dated between 15 100 cal BP and 13 900 cal BP and were found to be 63 5 Natufian were also found to be 36 5 Sub Saharan African e g Hadza which is drawn out most of all by West Africans e g Yoruba Mende 47 In addition to having similarity with the remnant of a more basal Sub Saharan African lineage e g a basal West African lineage shared between Yoruba and Mende peoples the Sub Saharan African DNA in the Taforalt people of the Iberomaurusian culture may be best represented by modern West Africans 48 In 15 000 BP Niger Congo speakers may have migrated from the Sahelian region of West Africa along the Senegal River and introduced haplogroup L2a1 into North Africa resulting in modern Mauritanian peoples and Berbers of Tunisia inheriting it 49 Between 12 000 BP and 8000 BP West African hunter gatherers then likely migrated from coastal West Africa toward the north of West Africa 4 8 as far as Mali Burkina Faso 8 and Mauritania 9 as evidenced by their microlithic industries e g quartz sandstone 4 Amid the early period of the Holocene West African hunter gatherers may have had Sahelian stone industries from Senegal to Niger which while it may have derived from a distinct Sub Saharan African stone tradition may have derived from the Shum Laka stone tradition of Cameroon 8 While the Niger Congo migration may have been from West Africa into Kordofan possibly from Kordofan Sudan Niger Congo speakers 29 e g Mande 50 accompanied by undomesticated helmeted guineafowls may have traversed into West Africa domesticated the helmeted guineafowls by 3000 BCE and via the Bantu expansion traversed into other parts of Sub Saharan Africa e g Central Africa East Africa Southern Africa 29 According to Steverding 2020 Near the African Great Lakes schistosomes e g S mansoni S haematobium underwent evolution 51 Subsequently there was an expansion alongside the Nile River 51 From Egypt the presence of schistosomes expanded into Western Africa and then subsequently to Central and Southern Africa Whether this was specifically due to the migration of Yoruba people into Western Africa 51 as well as the migratory Bantu speaking peoples into the rest of Sub Saharan Africa e g Southern Africa Central Africa is uncertain 51 In the 10th millennium BCE Niger Congo speakers developed pyrotechnology and employed subsistence strategy at Ounjougou Mali 10 Prior to 9400 BCE Niger Congo speakers independently created and used matured ceramic technology 10 11 12 e g pottery pots to contain and cook grains e g Digitaria exilis pearl millet 10 52 ethnographically and historically West African women have been the creators of pottery in most West African ceramic traditions 11 53 54 and their production of ceramics is closely associated with creativity and fertility 54 Amid the tenth millennium BCE microlith using West Africans migrated into and dwelt in Ounjougou alongside earlier residing West Africans in Ounjougou 55 Among two existing cultural areas earlier residing West Africans in Ounjougou were of a cultural area encompassing the Sahara region e g Tenere Niger Chad Air Niger Acacus Libya Algeria 55 Tagalagal Niger Temet Niger 56 of Africa and microlith using West Africans were of a cultural area encompassing the forest region of West Africa 55 nbsp Round Head figure wearing a Barbary sheep styled mask 1 Following the Ogolian period between the late 10th millennium BCE and the early 9th millennium BCE the creators of the Ounjougou pottery the earliest pottery in Africa migrated along with their pottery from Ounjougou Mali into the Central Sahara 13 The emergence and expansion of ceramics in the Sahara may be linked with the origin of both the Round Head and Kel Essuf rock art which occupy rockshelters in the same regions e g Djado Acacus Tadrart as well as have a common resemblance e g traits shapes 16 Whether or not Ounjougou ceramic culture spread as far as Bir Kiseiba Egypt which had pottery that resembled Ounjougou pottery had implements used for grinding like at Ounjougou and was followed by subsequent ceramic cultures e g Wadi el Akhdar Sarurab Nabta Playa remains to be determined 13 Between 8200 BCE and 6400 BCE Central Saharan hunter gatherers of Libya e g Takarkori Uan Afuda gathered a diverse selection of flora e g aquatic plants from lakes grasses from savanna grasslands and utilized ceramic pots to process and cook the flora 57 By 10 000 BP the primary region of residence for Niger Congo speakers who wielded bows and arrows may have been the southern region of the Central Sahara 14 Amid an early period of the Holocene semi settled Epipaleolithic and Mesolithic hunters who created a refined material culture e g stone tools decorated pottery as early as 10 000 BP 58 also created the engraved Kel Essuf and painted Round Head rock art styles located in the region e g some in the Acacus some in the Tadrart some in the Jebel Uweinat of Libya in the region e g some in the Tadrart most abundant in Tassili n Ajjer of Algeria in the region e g Djado of Nigeria and the region e g Djado of Niger 58 59 60 Amid the early Sahara Round Head rock artists who had a sophisticated culture and engaged in the activity of hunting and gathering also developed pottery utilized vegetation and managed animals 61 The cultural importance of shepherded Barbary sheep Ammotragus lervia is shown via their presence in Round Head rock art throughout the Central Sahara e g Libyan region of Tadrart Acacus Algerian region of Tassili n Ajjer 62 Barbary sheep were corralled in stone enclosures near Uan Afuda cave 62 From up to 9500 BP this continued until the beginning of the Pastoral Neolithic in the Sahara 62 Between 7500 BCE and 3500 BCE amid the Green Sahara undomesticated central Saharan flora were farmed stored and cooked and domesticated animals e g Barbary sheep were milked and managed by hunter gatherers near the Takarkori rockshelter which is representative of the broader Sahara this continued until the beginning of the Pastoral Neolithic in the Sahara 17 Between 11 000 BP and 10 000 BP the population ancestral to Yoruba people and Esan people grew in population size 46 As early as 11 000 years ago Sub Saharan West Africans bearing macrohaplogroup L e g L1b1a11 L1b1a6a L1b1a8 L1b1a9a1 L2a1k L3d1b1a may have migrated through North Africa and into Europe mostly into southern Europe e g Iberia 63 In West Africa the Holocene Wet Phase ushered in expanding rainforest and wooded savannah from Senegal to Cameroon 64 Between 9000 BCE 64 and 5000 BCE 64 65 Niger Congo speakers independently developed agriculture e g Yams Dioscorea 65 Oil palm and raffia palm were domesticated as early as 9000 BCE 64 Two seed plants black eyed peas and voandzeia African groundnuts were domesticated followed by okra and kola nuts 64 Prior to 5000 BCE their agricultural practices were spread throughout the woodland savanna and afterward were introduced southward into the West African forest 65 Since most of the plants grew in the forest the Niger Congo speakers invented polished stone axes for clearing forest 64 10 000 BP 7500 BP 8000 BCE 5500 BCE edit During the Green Sahara at Gobero there were two groups the Kiffians and the Tenerians 66 Between 10 000 BP and 8000 BP the Kiffians hunted e g harpoons undomesticated animals constructed stylized e g zig zags wavy lines pottery and fished e g fish hooks 66 Between 7000 BP and 4500 BP the Tenerians hunted fished herded cattle and constructed pointillistic designed ceramics 66 In the steppes and savannah of the Sahara and Sahel the Nilo Saharan speakers started to collect and domesticate wild millet and sorghum between 8000 BCE and 6000 BCE 67 Later gourds watermelons castor beans and cotton were also collected and domesticated 67 The people started capturing wild cattle and holding them in circular thorn hedges resulting in domestication 67 Amid the early Holocene Wet Phase Asselar man may have occupied Asselar in the Saharan region of northern Mali 68 near what was likely a lake 69 between 9500 BP and 7000 BP 68 During the early period of the Holocene in 9000 BP Khoisan related peoples admixed with the ancestors of the Igbo people possibly in the western Sahara 70 71 By 8000 BP canoes e g Dufuna canoe were being utilized in West Africa 14 While some Niger Congo speakers may have utilized bows and arrows to hunt other Niger Congo speakers e g Atlantic Bak Kru Kwa Ịjọ who diverged from the hunters may have utilized canoes to search for resources in and along the river systems toward the seacoast of West Africa 14 In Western Africa there may have been independent invention of bows and arrows 15 Pastoral Neolithic edit nbsp Africa in 5000 BCE 7500 BP 6500 BP 5500 BCE 4500 BCE edit nbsp Warrior Shepherd figures and animals of the Pastoral period As cattle pastoralism 72 also known as the African cattle complex 73 had endured in the Sahara since 7500 BP amid the Pastoral period Central Saharan hunters and herders may have lived together in a common area for a long period of time 72 The Round Head painting tradition was brought to its formal conclusion as the Green Sahara underwent desertification 20 Desertification may have resulted in migrations from the Central Saharan region where the Round Head paintings are located toward Lake Chad the Niger Delta 72 and the Nile Valley 74 While some migrated south of the Sahara other Central Saharan hunter gatherers may have taken on the custom of pastoralism 20 e g herding domesticated cattle and goats 72 Meanwhile as late as 2500 BP in the Central Sahara some of the creators of the Round Head rock art may have continued to persist as hunters 75 With the exception of the guineafowl and very recent experiments with the domestication of local wild species none of the domestic animals kept in west Africa are indigenous to the region The first pastoral populations in Africa came from Northeast Africa and gradually migrated Southwest into Sub Saharan West Africa during the onset of the mid to late Holocene dry phase 76 Amid the Green Sahara the mutation for sickle cell originated in the Sahara 45 or in the northwest forest region of western Central Africa e g Cameroon 45 77 by at least 7 300 years ago 45 77 though possibly as early as 22 000 years ago 77 78 The ancestral sickle cell haplotype to modern haplotypes e g Cameroon Central African Republic and Benin Senegal haplotypes may have first arose in the ancestors of modern West Africans bearing haplogroups E1b1a1 L485 and E1b1a1 U175 or their ancestral haplogroup E1b1a1 M4732 45 West Africans e g Yoruba and Esan of Nigeria bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype may have migrated through the northeastern region of Africa into the western region of Arabia 45 West Africans e g Mende of Sierra Leone bearing the Senegal sickle cell haplotype 45 79 may have migrated into Mauritania 77 modern rate of occurrence and Senegal 100 they may also have migrated across the Sahara into North Africa and from North Africa into Southern Europe Turkey and a region near northern Iraq and southern Turkey 79 Some may have migrated and introduced the Senegal and Benin sickle cell haplotypes into Basra Iraq where both occur equally 79 West Africans bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype may have migrated into the northern region of Iraq 69 5 Jordan 80 Lebanon 73 Oman 52 1 and Egypt 80 8 79 According to Roger Blench paleobotanical analysis reveals evidence of an early material culture connection between ancient Egypt and Sub Saharan Africa The direction of transmission of these crops were from Sub Saharan West Africa into ancient Egypt Some of the plants that were analyzed were citrullus lanatus or egusi melon watermelon found in the tomb of King Tutankhamun cajanus cajan or pigeon pea found in a 12th Dynasty tomb at Thebes vigna unguiculata or cowpea found in ancient Egypt during the 5th Dynasty and ricinus communis or castor bean found in Pre Dynastic contexts 80 Approximated to the Neolithic there were Negroid skeletal remains found in West Africa 81 82 At El Guettara Mali there were two individuals found 81 At Karkarichinkat South Mali a skull was found 82 At Ibalaghen Mali there was a cranium found 81 which has been specifically dated between 7000 BP and 4000 BP 83 At Tin Lalou Mali there was a cranium and mandible found 81 which have been specifically dated between 7000 BP and 4000 BP 83 At Tamaya Mellet Niger there were 12 individuals found 81 which have been specifically dated between 7000 BP and 4000 BP 83 Though possibly developed as early as 5000 BCE 25 Nsibidi may have developed in 2000 BCE 25 26 as evidenced by depictions of the West African script on Ikom monoliths at Ikom in Nigeria 25 Preceded by assumed earlier sites in the Eastern Sahara tumuli with megalithic monuments developed as early as 4700 BCE in the Saharan region of Niger 84 These megalithic monuments in the Saharan region of Niger and the Eastern Sahara may have served as antecedents for the mastabas and pyramids of ancient Egypt 84 During Predynastic Egypt tumuli were present at various locations e g Naqada Helwan 84 The prehistoric tradition of monarchic tumuli building is shared by both the West African Sahel and the Middle Nile regions 85 Ancient Egyptian pyramids of the early dynastic period and Meroitic Kush pyramids are recognized by Faraji 2022 as part of and derived from an earlier architectural Sudanic Sahelian tradition of monarchic tumuli which are characterized as earthen pyramids or proto pyramids 85 Faraji 2022 characterized Nobadia as the last pharaonic culture of the Nile Valley and described mound tumuli as being the first architectural symbol of the sovereign s return and reunification with the primordial mound upon his death 85 Faraji 2022 indicates that there may have been a cultural expectation of postmortem resurrection associated with tumuli in the funerary traditions of the West African Sahel e g northern Ghana northern Nigeria Mali and Nile Valley e g Ballana Qustul Kerma Kush 85 Based on artifacts found in the tumuli from West Africa and Nubia there may have been a highly developed corporate ritual in which the family members of the deceased brought various items as offerings and tribute to the ancestors buried in the tumuli and the tumuli may have served as immense shrines of spiritual power for the populace to ritualize and remember their connection to the ancestral lineage as consecrated in the royal tomb 85 In his analysis of West African cultures Christopher Ehret found numerous examples of a Sudanic sacral kingship that originated in the Middle Nile It is likely that it spread to the Niger Bend in West Africa from Nilo Saharan languages speakers who arrived there as early as the 6th millennium BCE Some of these civilizations and cultures defined by Sudanic sacral kingship were Wadai located east of the Lake Tchad Kwarafara which dominated the Benue River from the 13th to 18th century CE the 14th century CE Nri civilization northeast of Igala in Nigeria the medieval Songhay empire built from Gao the Hausa city states and the Soninke founders of the Wagadou empire 86 According to Michael Rowlands there are basic commonalities between the function of Pharaohs and the Mfon of the Bamileke people in the possession of negative and highly dangerous powers that could be put to good use in maintaining order Both the pharaoh and Bamileke chief authorize executions while mediating between principles of violence and legitimacy The focus is very distinctively on the king s body as autochthonous container and a conduit for the dispersal of substances Rowlands posits that the ancient Egyptians and Sub Saharan populations such as the Bamileke share a proto cosmogony derived from the same ancient African ancestors For Rowlands the role of embodiment and containment of life giving destructive forces has a certain relevance for understanding the distinctive features of contemporary African politics in the process of sparking an African renaissance to construct a new African history identity and culture and to reassert the notion of Africanness 87 Between the 8th millennia BCE and the 4th millennia BCE riverine farmers and savanna herders traversed the interconnected region of the Middle Nile Valley 85 In the Saharan Sahelian and Middle Nile Valley regions dotted wavy line and wavy line pottery which was produced between the 8th millennia BCE and the 4th millennia BCE late Neolithic and early Bronze Age preceded the emergence of monarchic tumuli the spread of the pottery spanned from the savanna region to the eastern Saharan region and from Mauritania to the Red Sea which supports the conclusions of trade between the regions and their interconnectedness 85 Wavy line pottery developed six ceramic subvariants and dotted wavy line pottery developed three ceramic subvariants the locations for the earliest development of both 8th millennium BCE potteries were at Sagai and Sarurab in Sudan 85 Wavy line pottery spread throughout multiple locations e g mostly in Central Nile some in Hoggar Mountains southern Algeria Delibo Cave Chad Jebel Eghei Chad Tibesti Chad and Adrar Madet Niger in Africa 85 Dotted wavy line pottery spread throughout multiple locations e g Ennedi Plateau Niger Plateau and Wadi Howar of Saharan Sahelian region interconnecting the regions of the Middle Nile River Lake Chad and Benue Niger River in Africa as well 85 Both potteries also spread along a north to west regional axis e g Wadi Howar Ennedi Plateau Chad Jebel Uweinat Gilf Kebir Egypt near the Saharan regions of Sudan and Egypt 85 The tumuli from the kingdom of Kerma serve as a regional intermediary between the regions of the Nile River and the Niger River 85 The Classical Sudanese monarchic tumuli building tradition which lasted in Sudan e g Kerma Makuria Meroe Napata Nobadia until the early period of the 6th century CE as well as in West Africa and Central Africa until the 14th century CE notably preceded the spread of Islam into the West African and Sahelian regions of Africa 85 According to al Bakri the construction of tumuli and the accompanying rituals was a religious endeavor that emanated from the other elements that he described such as sorcerers sacred groves idols offerings to the dead and the tombs of their kings 85 Faraji 2022 indicated that the early dynastic period of ancient Egypt Kerma of Kush and the Nobadian culture of Ballana were similar to al Bakri s descriptions of the Mande tumuli practices of ancient Ghana 85 A characteristic of divine kingship sometimes includes monarchic funerary practices e g Ancient Egyptian funerary practices 85 In the lake region of Niger two human burial sites included funerary rooms with graves that contain various bones e g human animal and items e g beads ornaments weapons 85 In the Inland Niger Delta 11th century CE and 15th century CE tumuli at El Oualedji and Koi Gourrey contained various bones e g human horse human items e g beads bracelets rings and animal items e g bells harnesses plaques 85 Cultural similarities were also found with a Malinke king of Gambia who along with his senior queen human subjects within his kingdom and his weapons were buried in his home under a large mound the size of the house as described by V Fernandes 85 Levtzion also acknowledged the cultural similarities between the monarchic tumuli building traditions and practices e g monumental Senegambian megaliths of West Africa such as Senegambia Inland Niger Delta and Mali and the Nile Valley these monarchic tumuli building practices span the Sudanian savanna as manifestations of a trans Sahelian common culture and heritage 85 From the 5th millennium BCE to the 14th century CE earthen and stone tumuli were developed between Senegambia and Chad 85 Among 10 000 burial mounds in Senegambia 3 000 megalithic burial mounds in Senegambia were constructed between 200 BCE and 100 CE and 7 000 earthen burial mounds in Senegal were constructed in the 2nd millennium CE 85 Between 1st century CE and 15th century CE megalithic monuments without tumuli were constructed 85 Megalithic and earthen Senegambian tumuli which may have been constructed by the Wolof people Serer people or Sosse people Mande peoples 85 Sudanese tumuli e g Kerma C Group which date to the mid 3rd millennium BCE share cultural similarities with Senegambian tumuli 85 Between the 6th century CE and 14th century CE stone tumuli circles which at a single site usually encircle a burial site of half meter that is covered by a burial mound were constructed in Komaland the precursors for this 3rd millennium BCE tumuli style of Komaland Ghana and Senegambia are regarded by Faraji 2022 to be Kerma Kush and the A Group culture of ancient Nubia 85 While the stele circled burial mounds of C Group culture of Nubia are regarded as precursors for the megalithic burial mounds of Senegambia Kerma tumuli are regarded as precursors for the stone tumuli circles of Komaland 85 Based on a founding narrative of the Hausa people Faraji 2022 concludes the possibility of the pre Islamic rulers of Hausaland being a dynasty of female monarchs reminiscent of the kandake of Meroitic Kush 85 The tumuli of Durbi Takusheyi which have been dated between the 13th century CE and the 16th century CE may have connection to tumuli from Ballana and Makuria 85 Tumuli have also been found at Kissi in Burkina Faso and at Daima in Nigeria 85 6500 BP 5500 BP 4500 BCE 3500 BCE edit By 6300 BP pottery began to appear in Konduga 88 Occurring in the era of Mega Lake Chad the pottery was designed in the custom of Saharan ceramics 89 By at least the 4th millennium BCE as indicated via the painted rock art of Tassili n Ajjer Proto Fulani culture may have been present in the area of Tassili n Ajjer 90 The Agades cross a fertility amulet worn by Fulani women may be associated with the hexagon shaped carnelian piece of jewelry depicted in the rock art at Tin Felki 90 At Tin Tazarift the depiction of a finger may allude to the hand of the mythic figure Kikala the first Fulani pastoralist 90 91 At Uan Derbuaen rockshelter of eastern Tassili composition six may depict a white ox under the spell of serpent related animals crossing through a U shaped gate of vegetation toward a powerful benevolent figure in order to undo the spell on the ox 92 Composition six has been interpreted as portraying the Lotori ceremonial rite of Sub Saharan West African Fulani herders 92 The annual Lotori ceremonial rite held by Fulani herders occurs at a selected location and period of time 93 and commemorates the ox and its origination in a source of water 16 90 The Lotori ceremonial rite promotes good health e g prevent epizooties prevent illness prevent sterility 93 92 and reproductive success of cattle by having the cattle cross through a gate of vegetation and thus the continuity of the pastoral wealth of the nomadic pastoralist Fulani 93 The interpretation of composition six as portraying the Lotori ceremonial rite along with other forms of evidence have been used to support the conclusion that modern Sub Saharan West African Fulani herders are descended from peoples of the Sahara 92 Following the northward expansion from coastal West Africa refugia West African hunter gatherers arrived and began dwelling at the Korounkorokale rockshelter in Pays Mande Mali where they engaged in hunting and fishing 4 By 4000 BCE red ocher used to paint pottery jewelry or pictographs was developed by West African hunter gatherers which may have developed as a result of interaction with populations from lake areas to the northeast 4 With the increased use of grinded stones and thus cultural development of utilizing vegetation for food this resulted in a decreased use of stone projectiles and thus decreased hunting cultural practices 4 By 700 CE along with Niani having been established Korounkorokale was embedded within the Kingdom of Kangaba 4 West African hunter gatherers and their ancient cultural traditions may have persisted shortly thereafter as West African hunter gatherers became fully acculturated and Malinke metallurgy and pottery traditions became predominant 4 As a result of aridification of the Green Sahara West Africans may have adapted by domesticating animals e g Helmeted guineafowl and plants e g Pearl millet African rice Yams 27 West Africa may have been a major regional cradle in Africa for the domestication of crops and animals 27 Between 5889 BP and 3685 BP West Africans domesticated pearl millet 27 Between 5500 BP and 1300 BP West Africans domesticated the Helmeted guineafowl 27 Between 3200 BP and 2000 BP West Africans domesticated African rice 27 During the Holocene the Green Sahara underwent the process of becoming a desert and became the Sahara this occurrence may have contributed to the start of domesticating field crops 28 Akin to the Fertile Crescent of the Near East the Niger River region of West Africa served as a cradle for field crop domestication and agriculture in Africa 28 Yams rice sorghum pearl millet and cowpea are field crops that originate in Africa 28 Domesticating of yams e g D praehensilis likely began in the basin of the Niger River between eastern Ghana and western Nigeria e g northern Benin 28 Domesticating of rice e g Oryza glaberrima likely began in the Inner Niger Delta region of Mali 28 Domesticating of pearl millet e g Cenchrus americanus likely began in the region of northern Mali and Mauritania 28 Domesticating of cowpeas likely began in the region of northern Ghana 28 Before 5500 BP Kordofanian hunters may have traversed from West Africa along the Yellow Nile River Wadi Howar into the Nuba Hills 14 5500 BP 4500 BP 3500 BCE 2500 BCE edit nbsp West African sites with archaeobotanical remains from third to first millennium BC The arrows indicate pearl millet diffusion into sub Saharan West Africa Herders from the Central Sahara migrated southward toward areas more fit for pastoralism as the Green Sahara became increasingly dry after 3500 BCE 94 Seasonal waterways were the likely migratory route taken by hunter gatherers and cattle herders to the Niger River and Chad Basin 21 Dwelling in the Sahelian region began to occur as long inhabited settlement and funerary sites of the northern region of Niger stopped being used 21 Migration of Central Saharan peoples into the Sahelian region of Sub Saharan Africa is verified via Saharan influenced pottery that appear in the Sahelian region 21 Herders from the Sahara expanded along with their cord wrapped roulette detailed ceramic culture and the agricultural practice of pearl millet throughout West Africa 39 Saharan roulette detailed ceramics may be associated with herding cultures from southern Algeria or pre herding cultures from Niger 39 After the first half of the 3rd millennium BCE domesticated pearl millet emerged for the first time near the Saharan and Sahelian regional boundary thereafter it expanded into the Sahelian and West Sudanian savanna regional boundary of Sub Saharan Africa 39 In adaptation to desertification Saharan herders developed agriculture as an additional subsistence strategy 39 As an adaptation to the desertification of the Sahara amid the Green Sahara period Saharan herders may have begun increasingly utilizing undomesticated flora near seasonally developed and local water sources e g streams ponds and thus contributed to the increased utilization and agricultural spread of pearl millet 39 After 2500 BCE desertification of the Green Sahara may have resulted in Saharan herders traversing further south in West Africa 39 In 2000 BCE amid the Later Stone Age Thiaroye Woman 22 also known as the Venus of Thiaroye 22 23 may have been the earliest statuette created in Sub Saharan West Africa it may have particularly been a fertility statuette created in the region of Senegambia 23 the Thiaroye figure which was found among quartz flint and ceramic fragments and atop a tumulus may be associated with the emergence of complexly organized pastoral societies in West Africa between 4000 BCE and 1000 BCE 24 Amid the 2nd millennium BCE agriculture likely along with cord wrapped roulette detailed ceramics spread throughout the Sahelian and West Sudanian savanna regions of West Africa 39 Cultural experience with the desertification of the Green Sahara may have contributed to adept adjustment to the drying of the Sahelian and West Sudanian savanna regions of Sub Saharan Africa by agropastoralists 39 Agropastoralists as early agriculturalists who likely originated in the Central Sahara began to migrate southward into these regions around 2200 BCE 39 Agropastoralists traversed through Tilemsi Valley and Ounjougou 95 Additional adaptations to desertification of the southern Sahara may have been the development of transhumance which was engaged in seasonally among some agricultural herders and the increased development of cord wrapped roulette detailed ceramics in Sub Saharan Africa which likely was first developed in the early period of the Holocene in the Central Sahara 39 While also hunting and gathering agropastoralists engaged in agriculture on a seasonal basis 73 Earlier subsistence strategies involved a combined approach e g agriculture pastoralism hunting foraging 73 Later migratory herding which is solely reliant on pastoralism developed and divergence between modern migratory herders and settled agriculturalists occurred 73 After 1400 BCE and before 800 BCE the spread of agriculture may have been altered and greening of the western Sahel occurred amid the 2nd millennium BCE 39 Spread of domesticated pearl millet may reached Lake Chad via eastern spread from the Niger River or an alternative avenue from the Central Sahara 39 Increased dryness began to recur after 800 BCE in West Africa and Central Africa 39 Amid the 1st millennium BCE agriculture spread not only near Lake Chad but near the Niger Delta Senegal Valley Jos Plateau and the southern region of Cameroon 39 Due to the complexity of pottery patterns and vastness of the area where interactions between peoples occurred during the mid Holocene specifying which linguistic group e g Niger Congo Nilo Saharan Afroasiatic is the first settling population is challenging 96 In any case pottery in Gajiganna shares cultural similarity across nearby areas of the southern Sahara most of all with northwestern Niger and northwestern Sudan 96 Pottery from sites dated to the second millennium BCE close to the Mandara Mountains in Cameroon and Nigeria also share affinity with the ceramics in Gajiganna 96 Amid the middle of the Holocene West African hunter gatherers continued to dwell along the rivers and within the forests of coastal West Africa 8 West African hunter gatherer stone industries had little presence to the north of the West Sudanian savanna and Sahel boundary which may indicate that it served as a type of natural environmental barricade to their greatly mobile hunter gatherer lifestyle 8 Increased use of ceramics among West African hunter gatherers also occurred as evidenced by ceramics dated to 5370 100 BP in Bosumpra Cave Ghana and ceramics dated to 4180 160 BP in Mbi Crater Cameroon 8 While likely still maintaining their hunter gatherer culture West African hunter gatherers may have increasingly utilized local flora e g palm oil tubers 8 At Khant 23 where people may have started dwelling in 5000 BP 97 the Neolithic human skeletal remnants of a tall middle aged man was found the remnants possessed traits closer to other Sudanese of the Neolithic era than modern Senegambians 23 Watermelons which may originate in West Africa may have spread into North Africa 98 e g seeds dated to 5000 BP at Uan Muhuggiag in southwestern Libya 98 99 Tutankhamun burial tomb in ancient Egypt via trade between West Africans and North Africans or may have spread into North Africa naturally amid the Green Sahara e g Pleistocene Holocene 98 West African ancestors may have diverged into distinct ancestral groups of modern West Africans and Bantu speaking peoples in Cameroon and subsequently around 5000 BP the Bantu speaking peoples migrated into other parts of Sub Saharan Africa e g Central African Republic African Great Lakes South Africa 45 From Western Africa the Bantu speaking peoples along with their ceramics expanded into the rest of Sub Saharan Africa 100 The Kalundu ceramic type may have expanded into Southeastern Africa 100 Additionally the Eastern African Urewe ceramic type of Lake Victoria may have expanded via African shores near the Indian Ocean as the Kwale ceramic type and expanded via Zimbabwe Zambia and Malawi as the Nkope ceramic type 100 As a result of the migrations of Niger Congo speakers e g Bantu expansion polyrhythmic culture e g dance music which is generally associated with being a common trait among modern cultures of Africa spread throughout Africa 101 Due to the Trans Atlantic slave trade music of the African diaspora many of whom descend from Niger Congo speakers has had considerable influence upon modern Western forms of popular culture e g dance music 101 In the Air Mountains region of Niger copper was independently smelted between 3000 BCE and 2500 BCE 102 The quality of the smelting process being used was not well developed thereby indicating that it was not introduced into the Air Mountains from an external region such as the Nile Valley 102 By 1500 BCE the quality of the smelting process became more developed 102 4500 BP 3500 BP 2500 BCE 1500 BCE edit The savanna and forest of West Africa and savanna and forest of Central Africa are the areas that chimpanzees originate and dwell 103 As such though rather speculative by the 2nd millennium BCE chimpanzees and or their artistic depictions e g seated and crouched chimpanzee statuettes developed between 2300 BCE and 1500 BCE may have been exchanged in a long distance trade network from West Africa or Central Africa through East Africa e g Elmenteitan and Arabia into the Near East e g Elam 103 Another possibility as via report of Hanno the Navigator is that via maritime trade from the Gulf of Guinea to the eastern region of the Mediterranean along the Incense Route into the Near East 103 Additionally it may have been traded from West Africa via pathways through North Africa and Rome in the 2nd century CE into the Near East 103 From 4500 BP Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan speakers in West Africa came into frequent contact with diverse Afroasiatic immigrants from Northeast Africa as well as speakers of a vanished language to the south as aridity pressed populations into close proximity 8 During the Copper Age and early Islamic era of ancient Israel West Africans may have migrated into ancient Israel and introduced head louse from West Africa 104 In 4000 BP there may have been a population that traversed from Africa e g West Africa or West Central Africa through the Strait of Gibraltar into the Iberian peninsula where admixing between Africans and Iberians e g of northern Portugal of southern Spain occurred 105 After migrating from the Central Sahara by 4000 BP the Mande peoples of West Africa established their agropastoral civilization of Tichitt 9 in the Western Sahara 106 The painted Pastoral rock art of Tassili n Ajjer Algeria and engraved Pastoral rock art of Niger bear resemblance e g color markings of the cattle with the engraved cattle portrayed in the Dhar Tichitt rock art in Akreijit 107 The engraved cattle pastoral rock art of Dhar Tichitt which are displayed in enclosed areas that may have been used to pen cattle is supportive evidence for cattle bearing ritualistic significance for the peoples of Dhar Tichitt 107 The considerable commonalities absent in modern North African cultures are present and able to be found between Round Head paintings and modern Sub Saharan African cultures 108 Saharan ceramics are viewed as having clear likeness with the oldest ceramics found in Djenne Djenno which have been dated to 250 BCE 108 The egalitarian civilization of Djenne Djenno was likely established by the Mande progenitors of the Bozo people which spanned from the 3rd century BCE to the 13th century CE 109 By 4000 BP interaction between Saharan occupants and Sub Saharan West African hunter gatherers increased as Saharan occupants increasingly migrated southward into Sub Saharan West Africa 8 As desertification was underway West African hunter gatherers of the Middle Niger were likely the first to encounter southward migrating Saharan occupants 8 Increased interaction may have resulted in the adoption of pottery and production of polished stone production which subsequently may have led to these cultural practices being further diffused unto other West African hunter gatherers 8 Additionally pastoralism may have been adopted by some West African hunter gatherers 8 As West African hunter gatherers of the Middle Niger became increasingly acculturated and eventually admixed into more numerous surrounding southward migrating Saharan occupants some West African hunter gatherers further south may have continued their hunting gathering and or basic vegetable cultivation cultures 8 Eventually even these socially organized West African hunter gatherers were likely acculturated and admixed into the more numerous surrounding West Africans from the Sahara 8 nbsp An example of a microlith projectile point a very small stone tool The shape of this one is similar to the ones that have been discovered at Kintampo sites Desertification of the Green Sahara resulted in the migration of Saharan pastoralists and agropastoralists south of the Sahelian region 8 Consequently seasonal interaction likely occurred between Saharan pastoralists and agropastoralists and West African hunter gatherers who also practiced basic agriculture via vegetable cultivation 8 Sites in Ghana e g Ntereso Kintampo Daboya provide an example of group contact in 3500 BP as evidenced by Punpun microlithic industries that appear in close proximity to Saharan projectile points beads stone innovations e g stone arm rings small stone axes and livestock 8 Rather than Saharan pastoralists and agropastoralists replacing West African hunter gatherers there apparently was a merger of groups as at Kintampo there was evidence of adaptation to the subsistence conditions of the forest savanna region of West Africa 8 Domesticated crops e g pearl millet cowpea large amounts of oil palm and undomesticated flora were availed in rockshelters e g B sites K6 near the Guinean forest savanna mosaic in the southern region of central Ghana 110 West African agriculturalists of Kintampo and West African hunter gatherers of Punpun were migratory peoples who settled at the sites seasonally for various reasons e g oil palm production this is evidenced by the varied way in which flora are situated at the rockshelters 110 West African hunter gatherers may have migrated southward near the forest region or scattered into smaller groups amid arid seasons 110 Various activities e g production of local resources occurred in partially settled areas of the savanna and forest regions 110 After 4500 BP desertification may have resulted in Saharan peoples migrating toward the south 110 The southern parts of the forest region near Kintampo may have been unfit for the subsistence techniques of farming domesticated crops e g pearl millet from the region of North Africa 110 As a result subsistence techniques were adapted to the natural environment of the forest region and local crops e g oil palm yams may have been introduced into what was usually farmed 110 Successful adaptation to the local ecology seems to have occurred from the southern part of the forest region to the coastal region of West Africa 110 West African agriculturalists likely formed mutual relations with the West African hunter gatherers 110 As a result of these relations West African hunter gatherers 110 who also practiced basic agriculture via vegetable cultivation 8 likely provided West African agriculturalists with oil rich and Vitamin A rich nuts as part of their local food source 110 Additionally West African agriculturalists may have acquired forest subsistence knowledge and strategies from West African hunter gatherers 110 As early as 4000 BP the engraved petroglyphs of Burkina Faso began to be created 111 Rockshelters and barns were utilized by the creators of the engraved petroglyphs 111 The engraved rock art was composed of floral radiant circles anthropomorphs lizards and herbivores and streaks striations and a single spiral headed cat 111 Anthropomorphs may have been the engraved image of a face composed plant and tree leaves as well as another possible engraved image of a face one figure may have a hat and ten figures may have been wielding spears and there may have been a few butterflies 111 Floral radiant circles cupules within circles 111 At Dokiti there are hundreds of radiant circles as well as images of what may be woodworms in wood and spindly monkeys 111 Mortars and grindstones as well as a linear arranged set of cupules within a cave with a rock in the center which could have served as a ceremonial altar were also found at an archaeological site 111 From a nearby village potsherds and more fifty stone circles were created and utilized by Neolithic Africans who were also likely the creators of the engraved rock art 111 From 1700 BCE to 500 BCE Terracotta net weights were used at Kolima South Mema Mali 112 In the mid 4th millennium BP four Negroid individuals occupied Kintampo in Ghana 113 114 115 Iron metallurgy may have been developed independently in West Africa 31 32 Archaeological sites containing iron smelting furnaces and slag have been excavated at sites in the Nsukka region of southeast Nigeria in what is now Igboland dating to 2000 BC at the site of Lejja Eze Uzomaka 2009 32 33 and to 750 BC and at the site of Opi Holl 2009 32 34 Iron metallurgy sites are known in the Nok culture from between the 9th century BCE and 550 BCE 35 More recently Bandama and Babalola 2023 have indicated that iron metallurgical development occurred 2631 BCE 2458 BCE at Lejja in Nigeria 2136 BCE 1921 BCE at Oboui in Central Africa Republic 1895 BCE 1370 BCE at Tchire Ouma 147 in Niger and 1297 BCE 1051 BCE at Dekpassanware in Togo 36 3500 BP 2500 BP 1500 BCE 500 BCE edit In 1500 BCE Mande speakers may have first domesticated African rice Oryza glaberrima and established the cultivation systems in the mid region of the Niger River 116 Subsequently West Atlantic speakers may have domesticated rice utilizing irrigation systems with mangroves near the Casamance and Sine Saloum rivers 116 In Sub Saharan West Africa there is rock art 117 At Igbara Oke in proximity to Akure Nigeria there are engraved geometric e g triangle and fish rock art 117 In Bauchi State Nigeria there is rock art at the Shira and Geji sites two rock art traditions at Shira are dark reddish monochrome colored anthropomorphous and realistic e g lactating cattle and their calves humans depictions and Geji has a painted depiction of a horse which may show that Geji rock art does not date earlier than the 15th century BCE 117 Other rock art in the northern region of Nigeria includes sites in several villages of Marghi in Borno State and Birnin Kudu in Jigawa State 117 The anthropomorphous depictions e g a red black and white colored cow short horned and long horned humpless cattle which may predate the presence of humped cattle in the northern region of Nigeria and may be at least a thousand years old at Birnin Kudu are distinct from the reddish colored depictions e g 1 antelope and 2 humpless long horned cows of outlined and striped rock art design 1 horse 1 unidentified portrayal and 8 humpless long horned cows of outlined rock art design 2 men 2 monkeys 5 humpless long horned cows and 6 unidentified portrayals and 11 antelopes of solid colored painted rock art design at Geji and the depictions e g humans animals at Marghi are associated with initiation and marital rites 117 nbsp Senegambian megaliths Between 1350 BCE and 1500 1600 CE Senegambian megaliths e g tumuli were constructed for the purpose of ancestral reverence 118 With exception to some parts of West Africa e g Ntereso Kintampo prior to the late first millennium BCE West African hunter gatherers who were the most widely spread cultural group of socially organized populations were likely the only group to populate the forest and savanna regions of West Africa 4 The expansion of West African hunter gatherers north toward the Sahelian region of the Middle Niger led to interaction with populations from further north 4 Prior to initial encounter with migrating populations from further north West African hunter gatherers may have already engaged in basic agricultural production of tubers as well as utilizing Elaeis guineensis and Canarium schweinfurthii 4 After interaction began some West African hunter gatherers may have acquired knowledge of pottery and polished stone production which then spread further southward onto other West African hunter gatherers while others may have acquired knowledge of pastoralism 4 Continued interaction may have resulted in further acculturation e g loss of West African hunter gatherer languages 4 Isolated groups of West African hunter gatherers may have continually dwelled throughout the region of the Pays Mande mountains after the development of metallurgy 4 West African hunter gatherers may have even adopted culturally adapted metallurgical practices while still maintaining their ancient stone industrial traditions 4 Cultural continuity via stone industries of isolated West African hunter gatherers from the forest savanna region has been found throughout West Africa as late as the end of first millennium CE 8 In Sopie FkBvl Liberia quartz microliths have been dated to 2360 125 BP 8 Kamabai Shelter in Sierra Leone had quartz microliths dated to 1190 95 BP 8 In Mali quartz microliths were dated to 1430 80 BP in Nyamanko and dated to 1020 105 BP in Korounkorokale 8 Kariya Wuro in Nigeria had quartz microliths dated to 950 30 BP 8 After having persisted as late as the end of first millennium CE 4 or 1000 BP 8 many of the remaining West African hunter gatherers were likely ultimately acculturated and admixed into the larger groups of West African agriculturalists akin to the migratory Bantu speaking agriculturalists and their encounters with Central African hunter gatherers 8 According to the Western Sudanic oral tradition compiled by Yoro Dyao 1847 1919 in the late 19th century CE six migrations were stated to have occurred from the Nile Valley to West Africa between the 7th century BCE and the 6th century CE These oral traditions support a Nile Valley origin for the people and cultures of the Western Sudan The Soninke Songhay Lebu Tucoleur Akan and Fulani are some of the West African populations that indicated to have derived from these migrations Each migration was started by either an invasion of the region by foreigners or the oppression of the invader regime on the indigenous population 119 120 121 According to Anne Mayor migrations occurred from the Sahel and Sahara into the West African Savanna from the first millennium BCE to the first millennium CE likely due to aridification resulting in significant contributions being made to the overall protohistoric peopling of the Niger Bend 122 One migration originated from the northwest with the complex societies e g Dhar Tichitt of Mauritania and is associated with corded roulette ceramics The other migration from the northeast consisted of iron metallurgists from Niger who spread concave matting techniques for ceramics into West Africa that originated along the Sudano Tchadian border 122 Peoples of the Niger Bend practiced fishing hunting herding agriculture iron metallurgy interregional or even long distance commerce and sometimes hierarchical social organization 122 A comparative archeological analysis of artifacts at the Cairo Museum and the Theodore Monod Museum of African art in Dakar Senegal reveals a deep material culture kinship between contemporary West Africans and the Pharaonic civilization that has traversed space and time 123 Contrary to the popular academic myth of North Africans e g Garamantes engaging in the chariot driven capture enslavement and trade of Sub Saharan West Africans during classical antiquity there were equitable transactions of materials e g gold made between Sub Saharan West Africans and North Africans e g Carthaginians 124 2500 BP 1500 BP 500 BCE 500 CE edit In 400 BCE or 300 BCE as the Green Sahara underwent desertification agropastoralists migrated in different directions from the eastern region of Mauritania 125 Some may have migrated southward and became the agropastoral Bafour peoples and some may have migrated northward and became the agricultural Haratine peoples 125 In Itaakpa rockshelter Nigeria human remains e g mandible maxilla which are similar to human remains from Shum Laka Cameroon and along with ceramics and African oil palm Elaeis guineensis are dated to 2210 80 BP 126 Between 2000 BP and 1500 BP Nilo Saharan speakers may have migrated across the Sahel from East Africa into West Africa and admixed with Niger Congo speaking Berom people 127 In 710 CE West African related populations e g Niger Congo speaking Berom people Bantu speakers and East African related populations Nilo Saharan speaking Ethiopians Nilo Saharan speaking Chadians admixed with one another in northern Nigeria and 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extensive historical admixture Science Advances 9 13 eabq2616 Bibcode 2023SciA 9 2616B doi 10 1126 sciadv abq2616 ISSN 2375 2548 OCLC 9819554112 PMC 10058250 PMID 36989356 S2CID 257834341 a b Togola Tereba May 1993 Archaeological investigations of Iron Age sites in the Mema region Mali West Africa PDF University Microfilms International p ii 112 113 doi 10 30861 9781407301785 ISBN 9781407301785 OCLC 213478595 S2CID 129143321 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prehistoric West Africa amp oldid 1207219883, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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