ISSN 1681 - 5564
NATAL MUSEUM
Login
Current Issue
Past Issues
Search Issues
About us
Submissions
Subscriptions
Southern African Humanities
a journal of cultural studies

Invisible herders? The archaeology of Khoekhoe pastoralists
Sadr, K.

Although based on strong historical, linguistic and ethnographic evidence, the conclusion that immigrant Khoekhoe pastoralists introduced the first livestock to southernmost Africa finds no convincing archaeological support. This may be for a number of reasons. Perhaps nomadic pastoralists leave no archaeological traces; or migrations are difficult to detect. Archaeology and the other disciplines may not be looking at the same thing. Or maybe the migrations date to the second millennium AD, long after the first livestock had reached southernmost Africa. It is not easy to tell: Later Stone Age animal bones, stones and pots do not broadcast the language and identity of the people who discarded them.

To cite this article: Sadr, K. 2008 in press. Invisible herders? The archaeology of Khoekhoe pastoralists. Southern African Humanities 20.

  Click on pdf to login and view article
pdf not available
              

Click the image below to download Adobe® Reader® if you do not have it installed. (Required to view .pdf files)


 
New search
Volume:
Keywords:
 
  
 
 
  © Natal Museum 2004 login | current issue | past issue | search issues | about us | submissions | subscribe  designed by ePages.net