Original inhabitants of the Sahara back when it was still wet and fertile were a group of veritable giants (reaching 2 meters) who lived in complex, sedentary fisher-societies alongside the banks of the various lakes, among them Lake Megachad, then the size of the Caspian Sea.
The lakeside plains they inhabited often flooded, so they built large mounds to live upon. They also had advanced canoes with which they traversed the waterways. Through vast spans of the Sahara, a unified 'wavy line' style of pottery dominated, evidencing a shared culture
In time, the climate began to shift, and the waters retreated. When this happened, the great lagoons and floodplains became for a time wide, fertile pastures. This drew the attention of incoming pastoralists, whose hitherto home further north was quickly drying.
Ultimately, the cultures of these giant, aboriginal North Africans ("Mechtoids") were assimilated by the incoming pastoralists, and from their union arose probably the first Chadic and Berber peoples as we know them.
The Sahara's final desertification had a shattering, knock-on effect on the peoples of the region. One group whose very origins may lie in this event is that of the Nilo-Saharans, whose original homeland may have been along the Yellow Nile, a now-vanished tributary of the Nile.
When the great pasturelands of Northern Africa turned to sand, many people were forced north, towards the Barbary Coast.
Others, however, moved south. Nilotic peoples from South Sudan, though visually distinctly Sub-Saharan, carry North African genetic signatures.
The Fulani are another possibly result of this exodus. Denizens of the Sahel and West Africa and speakers of a sub-Saharan Niger–Congo language, they nevertheless maintain a heavily pastoralist lifestyle, and show male-line ties with Afroasiatics and Nilo-Saharans.
It seems plausible to theorise that the knock-on effect of the drying Sahara led, in a sort of African Völkerwanderung, to a large-scale invasion south of various pastoralist tribes. In time, many were effectively assimilated, but their lifestyle lives on, as does trace ancestry.
Not even mentioned in all this are the repeated ingressions of Eurasian ancestry into Chad & East Africa. Such ancestry seems to have come both from the Near East & Iberia, diffusing perhaps first along the northern shores before being thrust into the desert &, ultimately, south.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
One of the craziest points of history/ethnology is & will remain to me that a Celtic language was at one pointed spoken in the central regions of what is now Turkey. They were the Galatians of Epistle-fame
Not only that, but their language may have survived longer than Gaulish
Their place-names included things such as Drunemeton, which shares a root with the word 'Druid', and Acitorigiaco, 'Settlement of Acitorix', to which a more classically Gaulish-sounding name can hardly be mustered.
For a time, the Galatians ruled Ankara.
One of the first peoples to be Christianised, the Galatians had prior to this fought the Galatian War, wherein they allied with the Greek state of Pergamon against the expanding Rome. Probably the Celts are the only ppl of Northwestern Europe to appear in the Bible.
A reading from old Danish folklore which may interest people, of a great battle on western Zealand which, though mythical, is rife with old remembrances. This story was collected in the 1800s.
The very spot today
Note several things in this tale - the peasants of 19th-century Zealand still knew the barrows were associated with paganism, and that ancient warriors were buried in them. The common motif associating barrows with giants is present, but mixed with a more historical element.
Some might say the only thing swinging here is the media reports, not the bulk of the evidence. *That* has been clear to interested parties for a while
I've not seen in the last decade one study arriving at a climate-induced extinction for the mammoth that is not either a) not even a direct study of extinction causality or b) profoundly methodologically flawed
I'll repeat my request from many times prior - show me a study arriving at a climatic cause that actually addresses the existence of the past glacials and interglacials, as well as the temporal disjunction of the Weichsel-Holocene extinctions. Show me 1.
If you ever feel academic discussion has gotten polarised & politicised today, think back to the time Nicolas Fréret, an 18th-century French scholar, was thrown in the Bastille for several months for asserting the Franks to have been a Germanic tribe, and not adventuring Trojans.
Clearly, philology was a slightly heftier topic back then.
Why yes gospodin komissar, my latest readings indicate the Rus were indeed in origin a Norse tribe from eastern Scandinavia, a fascina- wait, where are you taking me?
The Caspian Sea is the world's largest inland body of water, famously possessing even an endemic species of seal. Yet did you know it used to be far, far larger? During much of the Pleistocene, its area more than doubled. It even seems to have until quite recently housed whales.
Dolphin-fossils are known from the Quaternary of the Caspian, and artistic evidence in the form of the Gobustan Rock Art, dating to between 5-20kya, seems to portray some large marine mammal. Also seabirds, plausible guillemots, seem evidenced
Also the origin of the Caspian seal is something of a mystery. It, along with the equally isolated Baikal seal, seems to have radiated around the late Pliocene, just at the start of the Ice Age, but how exactly it got there is, as with the dolphins, a great mystery.
It is a rather interesting fact that Rhododendron, despite its common status as an 'invasive' species nowadays, and its undeniable deleterious environmental consequences, is in fact native to the British isles, having occurred there in the Eemian.
How can this be explained? Few studies to my knowledge have been carried out explicitly on the subject, but it seems most probable that the key thing controlling R. ponticum was also the main thing now missing from European ecosystems - large, destructive megafauna.
Likewise, though it's true that closed-canopy woods were once predominant across Western Europe, this was itself an unnatural result of human-induced megafauna extinctions. See for instance Sandom et al. (2014) comparing the Eemian to Early Holocene