Abstract
This paper considers the ecological residues of pastoralist occupation at the site of Maili Sita in Laikipia, central Kenya, drawing links with the archaeological record so as to contribute a fresh approach to the ephemeral settlement sites of mobile herding communities, a methodological aspect of African archaeology that remains problematic. Variations in the geochemical and micromorphological composition of soils along transects across the site are compared with vegetation distributions and satellite imagery to propose an occupation pattern not dissimilar to contemporary Cushitic-speaking groups further north. We argue that Maili Sita exemplifies the broad migratory and cultural exchange networks in place during the mid- to late second millennium AD, with pastoralist occupants who were both physically and culturally mobile.
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Boles, O. J. C., & Lane, P. J. (2016). The Green, Green Grass of Home: an archaeo-ecological approach to pastoralist settlement in central Kenya. Azania, 51(4), 507–530. https://doi.org/10.1080/0067270X.2016.1249587
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