Author:
Fitton Tom,Contreras Daniel A.,Gidna Agness O.,Mabulla Audax Z.P.,Prendergast Mary E.,Grillo Katherine M.
Abstract
Common assumptions about the ephemeral archaeological signature of pastoralist settlements have limited the application of geophysical techniques in the investigation of past herding societies. Here, the authors present a geophysical survey of Luxmanda, Tanzania, the largest-known settlement documented for the Pastoral Neolithic era in eastern Africa (c. 5000–1200 BP). The results demonstrate the value and potential of fluxgate gradiometry for the identification of magnetic anomalies relating to archaeological features, at a category of site where evidence for habitation was long thought to be undetectable. The study provides comparative data to enable archaeologists to identify loci for future investigations of mobile populations in eastern Africa and elsewhere.
Funder
National Geographic Society
Wenner-Gren Foundation
Subject
General Arts and Humanities,Archeology
Cited by
3 articles.
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