Prof Smith addressing participants |
Prof Smith
has specialized in the origins and development of herding societies of Africa,
he has excavated key sites and worked with Khoekhoen (Khoi) descents in South
Africa. Prof Smith introduced the Khoekhoen, who were aboriginal herders in the
Western and Southern Cape, South Africa and Namibia. The Khoekhoen were similar
to other transhumant pastoralists, their livelihoods were based on stock and
they moved with their herds on a seasonal basis.
Prof. Smith pieced together
evidence from archaeological excavation sites, including animal bones, pottery
shards, and stone tools, which together with an examination of the linguistic
origins of the very diverse Khoekhoen language, and genetic DNA analysis of
Khoi descendants, indicates that the Khoekhoen herders are linked to East
Africa. The various evidence suggests that the Khoekhoen arrived in the Western
Cape approximately 2200 years before present, and that they had migrated with
their herds, which were predominately sheep, from the North, probably East
Africa.
No comments:
Post a Comment