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Early Plant Cultivation in the Central African Rain Forest: First Millennium BC Pearl Millet from South Cameroon

The Bantu expansion, a major topic in African archaeology and history, is widely assumed to correlate with the spread of farming, but archaeological data on the subsistence of these putative early Bantu speakers are very sparse. However, finds of domesticated pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) in sou...

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Published in:Journal of African archaeology 2009-01, Vol.7 (2), p.253-272
Main Authors: Kahlheber, Stefanie, Bostoen, Koen, Neumann, Katharina
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Bostoen, Koen
Neumann, Katharina
description The Bantu expansion, a major topic in African archaeology and history, is widely assumed to correlate with the spread of farming, but archaeological data on the subsistence of these putative early Bantu speakers are very sparse. However, finds of domesticated pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) in southern Cameroonian archaeological sites, dated between 400 and 200 BC, open new perspectives on the history of agriculture in the Central African rain forest. Linguistic evidence suggests that pearl millet was part of early agricultural traditions of Bantu speakers, and has to a great extent been distributed during the course of their expansion over large parts of western Bantu-speaking Africa, possibly even originally from their homeland in the Nigerian-Cameroonian borderland. In combining archaeobotanical, palaeoenvironmental and linguistic data, we put forward the hypothesis that an agricultural system with pearl millet was brought into the rain forest during the first millennium BC, and that its spread across Central Africa coincided with the dispersal of certain Bantu language subgroups.
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection
subjects Africa
African history
Agriculture
Archaeobotany
Archaeological research
Archaeological sites
Bantu
Crops
Cultivation practices
Flora
Horticultural practices
Language
Linguistics
Millet
Paleoecology
Pearls
Plants
Rain forests
Tropical rain forests
title Early Plant Cultivation in the Central African Rain Forest: First Millennium BC Pearl Millet from South Cameroon
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