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Title: UNDP's mitigation strategy in Africa


1
Cultural Heritage in the Sahara I
Archaeological environmental contexts
Nick Brooks Tyndall Centre for Climate Change
Research University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4
7TJ. Email nick.brooks_at_uea.ac.uk Web
http//www.cru.uea.ac.uk/e118/welcome.htm
Western Sahara Project
2
Why the Sahara?
  • Archaeology
  • Rich archaeological record - palaeolithic into
    historical period
  • Area of pristine state formation (Fezzan,
    Libya)
  • Environmental change
  • Subject to dramatic changes in environment (e.g.
    3000 BCE)
  • A theoretically ideal training ground for the
    analysis of social responses to major
    environmental alterations. (di Lernia, 2006)
  • Heritage
  • the worlds largest collection of prehistoric
    art (Lhote, 19591)
  • Millions of paintings engravings, rich funerary
    landscapes
  • Threats from development, tourism, urbanisation,
    resource extraction, coupled with generally low
    awareness poor protection of heritage

1Cited in Keenan (2007)
3
Context Past Saharan Environments
4
Framing archaeology environmental change
  • Successive arid-humid episodes driven by orbital
    changes monsoons
  • Humid 10,000-5000 yrs before present (BP)
    desiccation 5000 BP
  • Early - Middle Holocene period (Holocene past
    10,000 yrs)

For review of linked Holocene environmental
cultural change in the Sahara elsewhere see
Brooks et al. (2005) Brooks (2006)
5
Holocene Climatic Optimum 10,000-5000 BCE
6
Large humid climate fauna
Photos from Wadi Mathandoush, Fezzan, Libya
7
Abrupt Desertification
Dust input in eastern tropical Atlantic
sediments. Note reversal of vertical scale
  • Gradual trend towards aridity with short arid
    phases after 8000 BP
  • Abrupt desertification after 5700 BP
  • Aridification stabilizes after 5200 BP
  • 6th millennium BP time of profound environmental
    cultural change globally

See also Brooks (2006)
8
Archaeological Heritage A Few Examples
9
Past Human Occupation
Images from Western Sahara
10
Uan Tabu rockshelter, Acacus, Libya
11
Hunting with dogs, Uan Tabu
12
One of a group of elephants, el-Greifa, Fezzan,
Libya
13
Tiffinagh scrip, Taglit, Wadi al-Ajal, Libya
14
The Sahara Museum and Laboratory
Museum of prehistory - window on Early-Middle
Holocene Laboratory - of human adaptation to
climatic environmental change
15
Human-Environment Interaction in the Prehistoric
Sahara
16
Cattle Cults the Saharan Megalithic
  • Rapid spread of cattle cult after 7000 BP,
    with drier conditions
  • Cattle themes in rock art , Ritual slaughtering
    and burial
  • Earliest Saharan monumental architecture
  • Initially only animal burials
  • Later monuments also contain human burials
  • Increased territoriality and social stratification

Anticlockwise from top left Cattle engraving,
Wadi Mathandoush, Libya funerary monument, Area
177, southern Libya cattle engraving, wadi Erni,
Western Sahara cattle paintings, Rekeiz
Lemgassem, Western Sahara
17
Population responses to aridification 6000-5000
BP
Carbon 14 dates from 1040 archaeological sites in
the Sahara between 13 and 34 N. From Vernet and
Faure, 2000. Southward shift in occupation after
5000 BP 5000 BP represents hinge between humid
arid conditions (di Lernia Manzi, 1998)
18
Saharan Refugia
Palaeolake deposits with associated stone tools
and monuments, southern Libya
19
The Libyan Fezzan
  • Region represented refuge for central Saharan
    populations after sub-continental scale
    desiccation accelerated around 5000 BP
  • Subject to extensive geo-archaeological research
    (Fezzan Project, Italian-Libyan Joint Mission in
    the Acacus)
  • Key region for studying state formation,
    human-environment interaction

LIBYA
  • For detailed discussion of archaeological
    environmental research in Fezzan see
  • di Lernia et al. 2002
  • Mattingly 2003
  • Mattingly et al. 2003

ALGERIA
NIGER
20
Aridity Cultural Change in the Fezzan
  • Early Holocene
  • Hunting gathering relative sedentism
  • 7th millennium BP
  • Cattle herding introduced
  • Shift from semi-permanent lowland settlements to
    transhumance as conditions become drier in late
    7th mil.
  • Monumental funerary architecture
  • 5000 BP onwards
  • Monsoon collapse, aridity
  • Winter rains persist in highlands - hunting
  • Congregation in oasis areas
  • Increasing sedentism (cattle) AND increasing
    mobility (sheep goats)
  • In-migration, population increase
  • Human burials completely replace faunal
  • Denser concentration of burial monuments

Images from top hunter, Wadi Mathandoush
hunting barbary sheep, Acacus monument, Wadi
al-Ajal
21
Final desiccation of the Fezzan
  • Early 3rd millennium BP
  • Soil moisture reserves depleted by 3500 BP
    (Wadi Tannezuft)1
  • Fluvial activity until 2700 BP (Wadi
    Tannezuft)1
  • Last lakes in Murzuq Sand Sea desiccated around
    or soon after 3 ka1
  • Springs dry up along foot of Messak Settafet,
    Wadi al-Hayat 3100 225 BP2

Cultural changes in the Fezzan - emergence of
Garamantes
  • 1st permanent settlement structure - Zinchechra
    hill fort, Wadi al-Ajal3
  • Establishment of Garama, principle Garamantian
    settlement, at edge of drying Germa Playa, last
    permanent water source3
  • Introduction of irrigated agriculture in early
    3rd millennium BP3
  • Emergence of Garamantian Tribal Confederation in
    desiccating refugia
  • Latest pastoral pottery in early Garamantian
    settlements4

For a review, see Brooks et al. 2005 Brooks 2006
1di Lernia et al. 2002 2Drake et al. 2006
Mattingly 2006 Mattingly 2003
22
In a certain sense, Late Pastoral people became
the Garamantesdi Lernia et al., 2002
Settlements, 900 BC - 500 AD
Zinchechra hill fort, 3ka BP
23
The Garamantes
Clockwise from above Garamantian warriors, Wadi
al-Hayat Garamantian chariot, Acacus mountains
Libyans from ancient Egyptian depictions.
24
The First Central Saharan State
  • Garamantian Tribal Confederation, early 3rd - mid
    2nd millennium BP
  • Large population centres, political control over
    large area, complex social organisation
  • Heartland in Wadi al-Ajal/al-Hayat surrounding
    areas

25
The Wadi al-Hayat Today
26
Irrigating the desert
Foggara spoil heaps
Modern Foggara, Algeria
See Wilson 2006
27
Summary The importance of the Sahara
  • Sub-continental scale repository of prehistoric
    cultural heritage
  • Rich heritage of funerary monuments comparable in
    diversity and exceeding in geographical extent
    those of megalithic Europe
  • Millions of prehistoric engravings paintings
    spanning millennia
  • Record of human occupation - lithics, ceramics
  • Environmental sites help us reconstruct past
    changes
  • Record of human responses to large climatic
    environmental change
  • Lessons about human adaptation relationship to
    cultural changes
  • Resource scarcity, territoriality, social
    stratification complexity
  • Instructive in terms of models of state formation
  • BUT
  • This heritage and valuable scientific information
    faces a variety of threats
  • Epitomised by situation in Fezzan, where
    development, oil exploration tourism are
    placing heritage at risk

28
Threats to Archaeological Heritage
29
I. Urbanisation development
Escarpment between modern towns of Germa and
Twesh, Fezzan, Libya
30
Garama/Old Germa
Germa
Garamantian cemeteries cut by road
31
  • Escarpment south of Germa - encroaching
    development threatens
  • Engravings from early-middle Holocene to
    Garamantian period
  • Prehistoric Garamantian funerary sites
    monuments
  • Garamantian quarries
  • Foggara

32
Quarrying in the Wadi al-Ajal
Escarpment at centre houses only recently
recorded rock engravings Ancient shoreline
features destroyed
33
Examples of engravings at risk
See Barnett 2006
34
II. Oil Exploration resource extraction
MESSAK SETTAFET, FEZZAN, LIBYA Seismic lines,
camps tracks, Messak Settafet Results of survey
by LASMO Grand Maghreb (subsequently bought by
AGIP) in late 1990s early 2000s
35
Seismic damage at Wadi Mathandoush, Messak
Settafet
Photos taken in 2004 after seismic survey by
LASMO Grand Maghreb See also http//www.cesmap.it
/ifrao/27.htm
See also http//www.dur.ac.uk/prehistoric.art/res
earch/2002_Libya/libya_index.htm
36
Cracking due to natural weathering exacerbated by
seismic prospecting - damage to unique scene of
rhino butchering by people with jackal masks,
Wadi Mathandoush, Fezzan, Libya
37
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38
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39
Verdict of International Federation of Rock Art
Organisations tracks were bulldozed which
completely destroyed the landscape, wadi flanks
were cut by machines, water points (gueltas)
filled up and rubble piled up against rock faces
with petroglyphs (Anonymous 1999 2001 Liverani
et al. 2000). In scale, this damage is
com-parable to the work of the Taliban who
destroyed an ancient statue in Afghanistan. IFRAO
Report No. 27 http//www.cesmap.it/ifrao/27.htm
Damage also confirmed by UNESCO after visit to
Messak Settafet in 1999 New roads seismic lines
make travel across Messak easier, making
vulnerable sites more accessible Damage occurred
at time when regulation of exploration activities
was weak - no EIA etc. Oil gas personnel also
responsible for removal of artefacts for private
collections
40
Current situation in Libya with regard to oil
exploration Oil exploration accompanied by
archaeological environmental impact assessment,
often in cooperation with foreign institutions
engaged in research
  • However,
  • Explosion in oil exploration since lifting of
    sanctions in 2004
  • Some resistance to foreigners conducting impact
    assessments
  • Limited capacity among national institutions to
    carry out assessment
  • Limited scope for foreign research teams
    researching new discoveries outside existing
    areas of work due to priorities, resources
  • Exploration in previously closed areas means many
    new finds
  • Lack of professionalism among national
    consultancies engaged in impact assessment means
    new sites vulnerable to looting

41
Some sites recorded along proposed seismic lines
in Area 177, Chevron concession, Jan. 2006,
far south of Libya
42
III. Looting of artefacts
Geomorphologically convenient - strongly
deflationary environment Little or no
stratigraphy - wind erosion of surface sediments
means portable artefacts from all periods exposed
on surface easy to locate and collect
  • Exploration in previously closed areas means many
    new finds
  • Lack of professionalism among national
    consultancies engaged in impact assessment means
    new sites vulnerable to looting

43
Looting in the Sahara II
There is scarcely a corner of the Sahara that
has not been looted or vandalised, while in some
areas, such as Morocco, it is estimated that as
much as 40 per cent of the known rock art
patrimony has been lost to looting or vandalism.
The looting is not limited to rock art. Lithics
and potsherds have been collected in their
millions. Extensive areas of the Sahara have been
subjected to what can best be described as
systematic vacuuming by professional looters to
such an extent that the archaeological landscape
of much of the Sahara has not simply been
damaged, but sterlised. (Keenan, 2007, p.215)
  • Damage caused by
  • Tourists, sometimes encouraged by tour guides
  • Local people, for sale to tourists
  • Oil/gas military personnel
  • Organised looting parties, for private
    collections sale on international markets
  • Archaeologists (especially during colonial period)

See Keenan (2007) for a fuller discussion more
examples
44
III. Tourism
Damage in the Acacus, Libya For many years,
archaeological sites protected by isolation
(physical remoteness political isolation of
Libyan state)
  • Large increase in tourism since late 1990s
  • Estimated 45,000 tourists in Acacus between Dec.
    1999 Apr. 2000 (di Lernia, 2005)
  • Significant damage to decorated rock-shelters -
    up to 40 shelters irreversibly damaged (Keenan,
    2005)
  • Paintings rapidly degraded, with major factor
    being washing of rock surfaces to enhance
    colours, e.g. for photographs (promoted by Lhote
    in Algeria, 1950s)
  • Better regulation of tourism today - entry and
    access more strictly controlled, tourists must be
    accompanied by guides have invitation
  • Exploration in previously closed areas means many
    new finds
  • Lack of professionalism among national
    consultancies engaged in impact assessment means
    new sites vulnerable to looting

45
Tourism heritage in southern Algeria (Ahaggar
region) Since 1960s, tourism associated with
Tuareg, vital income means of sustaining
traditional culture and (to some extent)
lifestyles (mobility, local knowledge,
camels) without tourism there is no nomadism,
and without nomadism there is no tourism (from
Keenan, 2004)
  • Tourism based to large extent on cultural
    heritage (especially rock art) helped sustain
    Tuareg communities facing loss of other
    livelihood pillars - now major pillar of
    nomadic-pastoral economy
  • Tuareg mobilised to protect heritage in response
    to widespread damage to sites environment
  • Association des Agences de Tourisme Wilaya de
    Tamanrasset (ATAWT)
  • Union Nationale des Associations des Agences de
    Toursime Alternatif (UNATA)
  • Tamanrasset Conference with World Tourism
    Organisation (1989)
  • Shift from view of archaeological heritage as
    being associated with Issebeten (people before
    them) to being key part of local cultural
    heritage as (tourism) value realised - awareness
    ownership
  • Arrival of internet important in allowing local
    people to access academic work on heritage, and
    to respond to sale of looted artefacts on world
    wide web (2002)
  • Tension between opportunistic sustainable
    tourism remains - actors are local people tour
    companies, developers, foreign tour operators
    airlines, foreign donors
  • Concerns about mass tourism, distrust of state,
    tensions between locals and incomers (gens du
    nord) feed into regional political tensions
  • Exploration in previously closed areas means many
    new finds
  • Lack of professionalism among national
    consultancies engaged in impact assessment means
    new sites vulnerable to looting

See Keenan 2004, on which above is based
46
Conclusions
  • Sahara has a vital role to play in our
    understanding of the human past, climatic
    environmental change, and human-environment
    interaction
  • Relevant archaeological environmental evidence
    is being lost at a rapid rate
  • Development (e.g. urbanisation, agriculture), oil
    exploration, tourism organised looting all
    contribute, and are intensifying
  • Archaeology often seen as obstacle to development
  • Tourism is mixed blessing - can place economic
    value on heritage raise awareness, but also
    associated with physical damage, market in
    artefacts, environmental impacts
  • Some progress in terms of regulation of tourism,
    organisation of local people to protect heritage,
    requirements for impact assessment, but long
    way to go
  • Association of archaeological heritage with
    people before us (I.e. pre-Islamic) persists -
    can lead to indifference or disrespect to
    heritage
  • Best way of safeguarding heritage is to encourage
    sense of ownership among local people
    government, backed up by effective regulation of
    potential destructive activities
  • Archaeological heritage often best protected when
    it becomes political !
  • Exploration in previously closed areas means many
    new finds
  • Lack of professionalism among national
    consultancies engaged in impact assessment means
    new sites vulnerable to looting

47
References I
  • Texts dealing most directly with cultural
    heritage issues highlighted in blue.
  • Barnett, T. 2006. Libyan rock art as a cultural
    heritage resource. In Mattingly et al. (eds.) The
    Libyan Desert Natural Resources and Cultural
    Heritage, pp.95-110. Society for Libyan Studies,
    London.
  • Brooks, N. 2006. Cultural responses to aridity in
    the Middle Holocene and increased social
    complexity. Quaternary International 151, 29-49
  • Brooks, N., Di Lernia, S., Drake, N. Chiapello,
    I., Legrand, M., Moulin, C. and Prospero, J.
    2007. The environment-society nexus in the Sahara
    from prehistoric times to the present day. In
    Keenan (ed.) The Sahara Past, Present and
    Future1, pp. 1-40. Routledge.
  • de Menocal, P., Ortiz, J., Guilderson, T.,
    Adkins, J., Sarnthein., M, Barker, L. and
    Yarusinsky, M. 2000. Abrupt onset and termination
    of the African Humid Period rapid climate
    responses to gradual insolation forcing.
    Quaternary Science Reviews 19, 347-361
  • di Lernia, S. 2002. Dry climatic events and
    cultural trajectories adjusting Middle Holocene
    Pastoral economy of the Libyan Sahara, in
    Hassan, F.A. (Ed.), Droughts, Food and Culture,
    pp. 225250. New York Kluwer Academic/Plenum
    Publishers.
  • di Lernia, S. 2006. Building monuments, creating
    identity Cattle cult as a social response to
    rapid environmental changes in the Holocene
    Sahara. Quaternary International 151, 50-62
  • di Lernia, S. 2007. Incoming tourism, outgoing
    culture tourism, development and cultural
    heritage in the Libyan Sahara. In Keenan (ed.)
    The Sahara Past, Present and Future1, pp.
    185-201. Routledge.
  • di Lernia, S., Manzi, G., Merighi, F., 2002.
    Cultural variability and human trajectories in
    later prehistory of the Wadi Tenezzuft. In di
    Lernia, S., Manzi, G. (Eds.), Sand, Stones and
    Bones The Archaeology of Death in the Wadi
    Tannezzuft Valley (5000ñ2000 BP). Centro
    Interuniversitario di Ricerca per le Civilta e
    líAmbiente del Sahara Antico e Delle Zone Aride,
    Universita Degli Studi di Roma and Department of
    Antiquities, Libya, pp. 281-302.

1Originally published as special issue of The
Journal of North African Studies, vol. 304 (2005)
48
References II
  • Drake, N., White, K. and McLaren, S. 2006.
    Quaternary climate change in the Jarmah region of
    Fazzan, Libya. In Mattingly et al. (eds.) The
    Libyan Desert Natural Resources and Cultural
    Heritage, pp.133-144. Society for Libyan Studies,
    London.
  • Keenan, J. 2004. Contested terrain tourism,
    environment and security in Algerias extreme
    south. In Keenan The Lesser Gods of the Sahara,
    pp. 226-256. Frank Cass, London.
  • Keenan, J. 2007. Looting the Sahara the
    material, intellectual and social implications of
    the destruction of cultural heritage (briefing).
    In Keenan (ed.) The Sahara Past, Present and
    Future1, pp. 214-232. Routledge.
  • Leblanc, M., Favreau, G., Maley, J., Nazoumou, Y,
    Leduc, C., Stagnitti, F., van Oevelen, P. J.,
    Delclaux, F. and Lemoalle, J. 2006.
    Reconstruction of Megalake Chad using Shuttle
    Radar Topographic Mission data. Palaeogeography,
    Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 239, 16-27.
  • Mattingly, D.J., 2003. Historical summary. In
    Mattingly, D.J. (Ed.), The Archaeology of Fazzan
    vol. 1, Synthesis. Department of Antiquities,
    Tripoli, and Society for Libyan Studies, London,
    pp. 75-106.
  • Mattingly, D. J. 2006. The Garamantes the First
    Libyan state. In Mattingly et al. (eds.) The
    Libyan Desert Natural Resources and Cultural
    Heritage, pp.189-204. Society for Libyan Studies,
    London.
  • Mattingly, D.J., Reynolds, T., Dore, J., 2003.
    Synthesis of human activities in Fazzan. In
    Mattingly, D.J. (Ed.), The Archaeology of Fazzan
    vol. 1, Synthesis. Department of Antiquities,
    Tripoli and Society for Libyan Studies, London,
    pp. 327ñ373.
  • Vernet, R., Faure, H. 2000. Isotopic chronology
    of the Sahara and the Sahel during the late
    Pleistocene and the early and Mid-Holocene
    (15,0006000 BP). Quaternary International 6817
    385387.
  • Wilson, A. 2006. The spread of foggara-based
    irrigation in the ancient Sahara. In Mattingly et
    al. (eds.) The Libyan Desert Natural Resources
    and Cultural Heritage, pp.205-216. Society for
    Libyan Studies, London.

1Originally published as special issue of The
Journal of North African Studies, vol. 304 (2005)
49
Additional, general reading
  • di Lernia, S. 2007. Incoming tourism, outgoing
    culture. In Keenan (ed.) The Sahara Past,
    Present and Future1, pp. 185-201. Routledge.
  • Giurovich, D. and Keenan, J. 2007. The UNDP, the
    World Bank and biodiversity in the Algerian
    Sahara. In Keenan (ed.) The Sahara Past, Present
    and Future1, pp. 332-343. Routledge.
  • Keenan, J. 2007. Who Thought Rock Art Was About
    Archaeology? The Role of Prehistory in Algeria's
    Terror,Journal of Contemporary African Studies,
    25,119-140
  • Mattingly et al. (eds.) The Libyan Desert
    Natural Resources and Cultural Heritage,
    pp.133-144. Society for Libyan Studies, London.
    Following chapters focus on heritage issues
  • Mattingly et al. Resources and heritage of the
    Libyan Desert, pp. 3-8.
  • Barker, G. The archaeology and heritage of the
    Sahara, pp. 9-28.
  • Keenan, J. Tourism, development and conservation
    a Saharan perspective, pp. 241-252.
  • Al-Rimayh, T. F. The national and human
    essentials for desert tourism in south-west
    Libya, pp. 253-260.
  • Liverani, M. The archaeological park of the
    Acacus, pp. 261-270.
  • Mattingly et al. Conference resolutions and a
    Sahara code for Libya, pp. 331-334.

1Originally published as special issue of The
Journal of North African Studies, vol. 304 (2005)
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