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Recent Archaeological Research at Toteng, Botswana: Early Domesticated Livestock in the Kalahari

This paper presents the first combined use of OSL and AMS dating to address the problem of the advent of livestock in southern Africa. Excavations at Toteng, at the eastern end of the Lake Ngami basin, have revealed bones of wetland and domesticated animals dating to around 2 ka. There is also Bamba...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of African archaeology 2008-01, Vol.6 (1), p.131-149
Main Authors: Robbins, Lawrence H, Campbell, Alec C, Murphy, Michael L, Brook, George A, Liang, Fuyan, Skaggs, Sheldon A, Srivastava, Pradeep, Mabuse, Abel A, Badenhorst, Shaw
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This paper presents the first combined use of OSL and AMS dating to address the problem of the advent of livestock in southern Africa. Excavations at Toteng, at the eastern end of the Lake Ngami basin, have revealed bones of wetland and domesticated animals dating to around 2 ka. There is also Bambata pottery and microliths. Between 2.1–1.5 ka the lake level increased to ca 934 m asl but declined rapidly to less than 930 m asl by 1.2 ka. People lived close to the shore of Lake Ngami but as the lake waters receded occupation was probably seasonal in the winter months; during the summer low-flow months they may have moved west to be near a smaller Lake Ngami or northeast to the Okavango Delta.
ISSN:1612-1651
2191-5784
DOI:10.3213/1612-1651-10106