Interior East Africa (28,577–7,822 BCE) Upper …

Years: 28577BCE - 7822BCE

Interior East Africa (28,577–7,822 BCE) Upper Pleistocene II — Deglaciation, Expanding Lakes, and Highland Hunts

Geographic and Environmental Context

The inland core of East Africa, covering:

  • Eritrea and Djibouti,

  • the Ethiopian Highlands,

  • South Sudan,

  • the Great Lakes region (Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi),

  • inland Kenya and Tanzania (Rift Valley belts),

  • Zambia, northern Zimbabwe, northern Malawi, and northwestern Mozambique.

Anchors: Lake Tana & Blue Nile headwaters, Axum/Yeha uplands, Upper Nile–Sudd wetlands, Lake Victoria, Lake Tanganyika, Lake Malawi, Rift Valley escarpments (Kenya–Tanzania), Rwenzori–Virunga highlands, Zambezi corridor.

 

  • Rising rainfall expanded Rift lakes and wetlands.

  • Forest patches spread in highlands.

Climate and Environmental Shifts

  • Bølling–Allerød (14.7–12.9 ka): wetter/warmer, lakes expanded.

  • Younger Dryas (12.9–11.7 ka): aridity, lakes shrank.

  • Early Holocene: rainfall surged again.

Subsistence and Settlement

  • Fishing intensified with harpoons and nets.

  • Hunting reduncine antelopes, buffalo, giraffe.

  • Lake shore camps became more permanent.

Technology and Material Culture

  • Refined microliths; barbed harpoons.

  • Net sinkers; grindstones appear.

Movement and Interaction Corridors

  • Victoria–Nile axis connected Great Lakes to Egypt.

  • Highland passes tied Rift to Red Sea.

Cultural and Symbolic Expressions

  • Rock art (cattle, hunting motifs) emerges in Ethiopian–Sudanese arc.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Fishing + hunting diversified diets; resilience through mobility.

Transition

By 7,822 BCE, foragers had become semi-sedentary fisher–hunters around Rift lakes.

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