Elmenteitan

Elmenteitan
Lake Elmenteita satellite image
Alternative names Elmenteitan Culture
Geographical range Kenya, Africa
Period Mesolithic, Neolithic
Dates before 1,300 BP
Type site Gamble's Cave
Major sites Gamble's Cave, Ngamuriak, Gogo Falls, Njoro River Cave
Preceded by Kenya Stillbay, Highland Savanna PN
Followed by Kenya Wilton

The Elmenteitan culture was a prehistoric lithic industry and pottery tradition with a distinct pattern of land use, hunting and pastoral practice that appeared and developed on the western plains of Kenya, East Africa during the Mesolithic.[1] It was named by archaeologist Louis Leakey after Lake Elmenteita (also Elementaita), a soda lake located in the Great Rift Valley, about 120 km (75 mi) northwest of Nairobi.[2]

The Elmenteitan was first described by Louis Leakey from excavations at Gamble's Cave (the type site) in 1931 and Njoro River Cave in 1938. Leakey had noticed a locally distinct cluster of the lithic industry and a universal pottery tradition in a restricted area on the plains west of the central Great Rift Valley and at the Mau Escarpment.[3] At Elmenteitan sites, many tool types are present that were common during the Aurignacian, but the Elmenteitan is distinguished by a high percentage of long symmetrical two-edged obsidian blades which were used unmodified and also served as blanks for a great variety of smaller tools.[4]

obsidian flake

Since the late Neolithic increasing food-production, animal domestication and mortuary rituals are documented. Progress, growth and continuity is related to wetter periods of more precipitation, resulting from Pleistocene fluctuations and retreating ice sheets.[5]

Typical object and artifact assemblages include large double-edged obsidian microliths and blades, ceramic bowls and shallow stone vessels. Domestic cattle and small stock was raised and herded in combination with hunting, fishing and foraging. Patterns and degree of subsistence economy varied greatly depending on location and local and temporal climate.[6][7] Unlike earlier and neighboring contemporary cultures, such as the Highland Savanna PN, regular cremation of the dead took place in caves (e.g. Egerton Cave, Keringet Caves). Njoro River Cave, first excavated in 1938 by Mary Leakey, served as a mass-burial site. Associated finds include beads, blades, stone bowls, palettes and pottery vessels, finds that are interpreted as evidence for a certain form of burial ritual.[8] All Elmenteitan excavation sites are associated with potsherds where pottery was fully developed. Ceramic vessels are mainly undecorated. Several rare, but very distinctive ornamental designs such as irregular punctuation and rim millings were also found. Occasionally small bowls with out-turned rims, handles with holes or horizontal lugs were discovered.[9]

See also

References

  1. "The Elmenteitan: An Early Food-Producing Culture in East Africa". Jstor. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  2. "Definition of Elmenteitan". Merriam Webster Dictionary. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  3. "The Archaeological and Linguistic Reconstruction of African History by Christopher Ehret, Merrick Posnansky". Google Books. Retrieved December 8, 2016.
  4. "The Archaeology of Africa: Food, Metals and Towns y Bassey Andah, Alex Okpoko, Thurstan Shaw,". Google Books. Retrieved December 8, 2016.
  5. "East African Pastoralism: Routes, Outcomes, Questions" (PDF). Alexandria Archive. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  6. "Elmenteitan". Archaeology Wordsmith. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  7. "A contribution to the study of subsistence patterns of elmenteitan populations with reference to animal bones from Gogo falls in Sourh Nyanza District, Kenya". University of Nairobi Digital Archive. Retrieved December 8, 2016.
  8. "Archaeological Sites Njoro River Cave". Act For Libraries. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  9. "NOTES ON THE STONE AGE CULTURES OF EAST AFRICA. By L. S. B. LEAKEY,Ph.D., F.S.A." (PDF). Biodiversity Library. Retrieved December 8, 2016.
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