West Africa (28,577 – 7,822 BCE) …

Years: 28577BCE - 7822BCE

West Africa (28,577 – 7,822 BCE) Upper Pleistocene II — Deglaciation, Mega-Lakes, and Savanna Expansion

Geographic and Environmental Context

The Atlantic and inland belt from Senegal and Mauritania east through Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, and Nigeria (western and central), plus the forest–savanna margins of Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, and Benin.

Anchors: Senegal–Gambia valleys, Inland Niger Bend and Inland Delta (Timbuktu, Mopti, Gao), Middle Niger–Kainji basin, Jos Plateau, Hausaland (Kano, Katsina, Zaria), Upper Volta basin, Gold Coast forest margins, Futa Jallon highlands, Dahomey Gap.

  • Deglaciation brought wetter pulses; Lake Chad expanded.

  • Niger Inland Delta broadened; Senegal estuaries lengthened.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Bølling–Allerød (14.7–12.9 ka): wet pulse, savannas expanded.

  • Younger Dryas (12.9–11.7 ka): drought shrank rivers.

  • Early Holocene: African Humid Period onset.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Foragers exploited mega-lake fisheries; hippo, crocodile, mollusks abundant.

  • Hunting on open savannas intensified.

  • Semi-sedentary lake camps formed.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Barbed bone harpoons (Niger, Chad); microliths.

  • Baked clay figurines (earliest Jōmon–Nok parallels).

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Lake Chad overflow connected Niger–Nile.

  • Niger Valley provided cultural trunk.

Cultural & Symbolic Expressions

  • Ritual deposits in middens; figurines mark symbolic systems.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Broad-spectrum foraging buffered climatic swings.

Transition

By 7,822 BCE, semi-sedentary foragers flourished in wetland savannas.

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