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Encyclopedia of society and culture in the ancient world ( PDFDrive ) 623

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Tiêu đề Hunting, Fishing, and Gathering in Africa
Tác giả Mark Anthony Phelps
Trường học University of [Insert University Name]
Chuyên ngành Ancient African History, Archaeology
Thể loại essay
Năm xuất bản 2019
Thành phố Unknown
Định dạng
Số trang 1
Dung lượng 71,68 KB

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BY MARK ANTHONY PHELPS Hunting, fi shing, and gathering activities are collectively known as foraging.. One is thus left with archaeological evidence to reconstruct this aspect of human

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BY MARK ANTHONY PHELPS Hunting, fi shing, and gathering activities are collectively

known as foraging Foraging was the only economic option

for all humans prior to the Neolithic Revolution (ca 9000

b.c.e.) Given that Homo sapiens sapiens appeared around

40,000 years ago, the bulk of human existence has been spent

foraging Th e primary sources for Africa from antiquity are

sparse Written sources, aside from the Nile Valley and its

im-mediate cultural neighbors, are foreign and are unconcerned

with recording the lives of foragers Oral sources rarely

ex-tend back beyond the 18th century c.e One is thus left with

archaeological evidence to reconstruct this aspect of human

history, along with models based upon historical foraging

groups

Th e advent of the Neolithic Revolution is manifested

in the archaeological record in the form of domesticated

plants, domesticated animals, the beginnings of a sedentary

lifestyle, and the appearance of ceramics as a means of

stor-ing domesticated products However, the African evidence

does not correspond neatly with this model In Africa there

is evidence of ceramics before domestication Th ere is also

evidence of hunting, gathering, and fi shing among settled

groups as well as evidence of pastoralism side by side with

gathering

Th e Nile Valley provides the earliest evidence for

seden-tarization At the delta site of Merimda Beni Salama, by 8000

b.c.e foragers were living in houses with hearths and had

large pottery vessels for water storage In the Faiyûm there is

evidence of a settlement on a shrinking lake from the seventh

millennium b.c.e Foragers lived in this settlement, with silos

built to store excess food Farther south, around Khartoum,

there is evidence from around 7000 b.c.e of a foraging

soci-ety with ceramics, silos, and net weights for fi shing Evidence

of a number of hunting and fi shing camps has been found

in modern-day Sudan Th roughout the Nile Valley the

domi-nant fi sh species harvested were the Nile perch and catfi sh

With the development of the harpoon around 8500 b.c.e

(appearing fi rst in Sudan), deepwater fi sh were exploited as

well A wide variety of species was hunted, including aurochs,

hippopotamuses, crocodiles, and a number of smaller

spe-cies Birds were also harvested Tubers seem to have been the

dominant fl ora food source Domestication reached the Nile

Valley in the fi ft h millennium b.c.e

Ceramics had appeared throughout the Sahara by 6000

b.c.e Th e Sahara supported plant life until around 4500 b.c.e.,

when a prolonged desertifi cation process began; through this

process the basic climatic patterning of today emerged around

2500 b.c.e During the wetter period permanent streams as

well as a number of lakes were found in the Sahara Th e faunal

representation was more Sahel-like, with many types of wild

grasses Herding was being practiced at Ti-n-Torha (Libya) by

7000 b.c.e It is not confi rmed in the western reaches of the

Sahara until the third millennium b.c.e

As the Sahara dried, the herders apparently moved south into western Africa Th eir infl uence is discernible all over the region from the second millennium, as herding became

a staple Th ey also brought domesticated millet and sorghum with them Th e date of the domestication of the latter two is not known but is fi xed at no later than around 1800 b.c.e., evidenced by African species that are present in India Along the Niger yam cultivation may have begun as early as 4000 b.c.e., based upon the presence of a new type

of hoe, though paleobotanical evidence is lacking However,

Although meat accounts for a relatively small propor-tion of the caloric intake of the Bushmen (estimated between 15 and 30 percent), it is still the prestige food item produced by foragers Meat distribution

is among the most important issues that occupy the attention of foragers A !Kung woman stated that the primary gender status gap appears because men are

“masters of the meat.”

The anthropologist Richard Lee experienced a social leveling mechanism in the course of purchas-ing a bull to be slaughtered for a Christmas feast for the band of !Kung he was researching Once word

of the particular bull chosen became known to the members of the band, the men began to complain to the anthropologist of his repulsive choice of animal Thoroughly depressed by the continuous complain-ing concerncomplain-ing his choice, Lee watched the killcomplain-ing of the bull and the unmistakable joy the animal brought the crowd The animal’s fl esh appeared to be in per-fect accord with what he had been told was the ideal Confused, he was told by an informant that he had experienced the mechanism of “insulting the meat.” For the !Kung, there is a fear that a good hunter could become vain, begin to hoard meat, and try to assert his will upon others Thus, when an animal is killed, those who go with the hunter to retrieve the carcass will complain about investing so much work for a useless “bag of bones.” The hunter will apolo-gize profusely Likewise, when a hunter announces that he has had no real luck but may have injured a little animal, the rest of the band knows to get ex-cited, as a large animal must have been hurt Hunt-ers engage in self-deprecation when announcing their luck In an environment in which death is a constant threat, bands must take care that all their members freely share risks and resources It is impossible to as-sert that such was the case among ancient African foragers, but the logic behind the mechanism prob-ably was at work in these societies as well

INSULTING THE MEAT

572 hunting, fishing, and gathering: Africa

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