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Photo Pages: Makgadikgadi - Ancient Village or Settlement in Botswana

Submitted by C_Michael_Hogan on Friday, 05 December 2008  Page Views: 3883
Archaeology and the Environment Site Name: Makgadikgadi
Country: Botswana Type: Ancient Village or Settlement
Nearest Town: Maun Nearest Village: Jacks Camp
Latitude: 20.56525S  Longitude: 25.160980E
Condition:
5Perfect
4Almost Perfect
3Reasonable but with some damage
2Ruined but still recognisable as an ancient site
1Pretty much destroyed, possibly visible as crop marks
0No data.
-1Completely destroyed
2 Ambience:
5Superb
4Good
3Ordinary
2Not Good
1Awful
0No data.
5 Access:
5Can be driven to, probably with disabled access
4Short walk on a footpath
3Requiring a bit more of a walk
2A long walk
1In the middle of nowhere, a nightmare to find
0No data.
1 Accuracy:
5co-ordinates taken by GPS or official recorded co-ordinates
4co-ordinates scaled from a detailed map
3co-ordinates scaled from a bad map
2co-ordinates of the nearest village
1co-ordinates of the nearest town
0no data
5

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Makgadikgadi submitted by C_Michael_Hogan

Ancient Settlement in Botswana. The Makgadikgadi was an enormous prehistoric lake formed by a late Pleistocene uplift blocking the southerly flow of a now vanished African river. This region is part of the earliest evolution of man, where significant advances in stone tool technology developed prior to migration northward.

Recovery of Early Stone Age tools at the Makgadikgadi shores and lakebed reveals vestiges of prehistoric habitation by Homo sapiens and Homo habilis. Late Stone Age tools are also present, representing more refined designs of recent man. The Sua and Nwetwe Pans are two of the largest elements of the Makgadikgadi, although the Nxai Pan has been added to the Makgadikgadi Pans National Park to form an enlarged natural area. Today the arid cracked lakebed stretches vast distances and is totally dry until the rainy season induces seasonal flooding.

GEOLOGY/HYDROLOGY. Millions of years ago one of the largest rivers of Africa collected the Zambezi and other rivers rising in the north, flowing through this region of the Kalahari. Geologic uplift around 800,000 years ago blocked this flow from reaching the Orange and Limpopo basins, forming a gigantic prehistoric lake at Makgadikgadi. Subsequently tectonic uplift in the extreme north of Botswana diverted the Zambezi and greatly restricted inflow to the Makgadikgadi area; as a result the Makgadikadi Pans are presently strictly a seasonal wetland with the Okavango alluvial fan to the north receiving the residual flow from historic drainages; however the summer wet season finds the Boteti River delivering copious flows here, producing a miracle of emergence of vegetation and wildlife amid the Kalihari Desert. Today's annual flow reaching the Makgadikgadi is less than two percent of the Pleistocene value. (Gieske, 1996)

The large pans Sua and Nwetwe are composed of saline clays and efflorescence approximately 50 to 100 metres deep. Equilibrium between stabilised dunes and pans is driven by aeolian forces. Fluctuation in groundwater levels during interpluvials has led to hardpan (paedogenic) formation of calcretes and silcretes with resulting low permeability. Annual rainfall accrues here averaging 50cm (McCulloch, 2003) The highly saline water table is quite near the surface for such a semi-arid region, resulting from the fact that these pans are actually the termini of a large endorheic basin. The Sua Pan actually recieves input from five distinct rivers: the Semowane, Mosetse, Lepashe, Mosope and Nata, the last of which drains part of southwest Zimbabwe.

ARCHAEOLOGY. Akin to the origins of man in the Waterberg region and Transvaal to the south, (Hogan, 2006) significant recovery of Early Stone Age tools has derived from Makgadikgadi as vestiges of habitation by Homo sapiens and even Homo habilis. Much of the extant collection is exhibited at Jack's Camp Museum located in the north end of the pans. Field reconnaissance in the dry lakebeds conducted in the present investigation yielded further surficial specimens of early stone tools and later projectile points.

Late Stone Age man would have lived here in huts made of sticks and grass in nomadic groups of 15 to 60 individuals .The women would have concentrated on gathering fruits and nuts, while men created snares of twine to catch springhares emerging from their burrows. Springbok and eland were hunted by spear and arrow, as the Later Stone Age tools had become quite sophisticated. Although no rock paintings are found in the pans, somewhat north in the Tsodillo Hills there is a wealth of animal and human subject rock art, some dating as early as 24,000 years before present.

ETHNOGRAPHY. The Late Stone Age people here were the ancestors of the Khoesan people who inhabited the Kalahari. These hunter gatherers lived here at least as late as the Time of Christ. (Tlou, 1984) Modern Botswana tribal populations are related to the Khoesan, but DNA evidence shows a closer relationship to the later Bantu immigrants. who entered the Kalahari aggressively and likely pushed the Khoesan into less favourable environments such as the Makgadikgadi. It is probable that the Khoesan would have at that time begun to keep livestock, although the Deti people deriving from the Boteti River region slightly north have cultural and linguistic evidence of earlier livestock tending. The implied time gap of grazing in the pans area may be explained by the greater occurrence of non-palatable grasses in the Makgadigadi. The Khoesan people have a legacy of deep spirituality, including abiding respect for animals and plants and the belief that no living creature should be killed without a specific need. They also practise rituals in which a trance state is entered to communicate with the supernatural.

WATER QUALITY. Wet season Makgadikgadi waters are characterised by very high salinity resulting from the endorheic terminus location. Sodium is the chief anion, with carbonate, bicarbonate, chloride and sulfate the principal cations. Magnesium and calcium have largely precipiated out. The dry pan surfaces have halite and trona (NaCO3 + NaHCO + 2H20) crusts. Phosphorus is abundant, but nitrate is the limiting soluble nutrient. Electircal conductivity in the north of the Makgadikgadi has tested as low as 320, while southern reaches have measured as high as 125,000 micro-siemens per centimetre. The pH levels typically range from 8.5 to 10.1, while total dissolved solids range from 30 grams per litre in the south to less than one gram per litre in the north.

ECOLOGY. High nutrient content makes the seasonal Makgadikgadi Pan wetland high in bioproductivity. In the year 2000 much of the Makgadikgadi was proposed as Botswana's second Ramsar site. When the Boteti River and other tributaries to the Makgadikgadi provide their wet season flow, the pans come alive, fostering large scale animal migration, major primary productivity of algae including cyanophyta, as well as the extraordinary congregation of breeding Greater and Lesser Flamingos, who feed on brine shrimp, which survive in a state of cryptobiosis over the arid winter and thrive when algal blooms appear. In Sua Pan the population of the Lesser Flamingo has been estimated at 150,000, while that of the Greater Flamingo is above 50,000 in Sua Pan alone. The total Flamingo count at Makgadikgadi exceeds estimates for the total African population, implying many of these species are here on trans-continental migrations. In addition the pans provide important habitat for numerous intra-African as well as palaearctic migrating birds.

Algal productivity is low in most Southern African compared to East African lakes; however, compared to other saline lakes of Africa, the Makgadikgadi basin realises the highest level of phytoplankton production. Sua Pan is noted for its high abundance of cyanobacteria and diatoms. These productivity levels are generated by high mineral concentrations in the suspended sediments and the high insolation levels of this high plateau. As a result dense benthic mats of periphyton result. The most abundant diatom genus at Makgadikgadi being Nitzchia, whose levels can exceed 4,000,000 cells per milliliter. Chlorophyll A concentrations reach their highest levels at the northern pans, with maximum levels exceeding 1400 mg/m3 in the latter part of the wet season. In the northern pans, nodularia and gloeocapsa are dominant phytoplankters, with nodularia concentrations reaching values of 40,000 filaments per milliliter.Generally periphyton production exceeds phytoplankton, likely due to high turbidity.

Dominant crustaceans at Makgadikgadi are"Branchinella spinosa", "Branchinella ornata", "Moina belli", "Daphnia barbata", "Lovenula africana". Other small invertebrates are dragonfly larvae, nematode worms, genus "Sigara" and several species of "Dytiscus". Species richness of crustaceans is higher in the north end of the pans. "M. Belli" is the most abundant crustacean with concentrations of 600,000 organisms per cubic metre occurring in April and seasonal production of up to 80 grams per cubic metre. "B. spinosa" biomass production can attain levels of two grams per cubic metre.

CURRENT ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES. Botswana as a whole has performed well in environmental conservation in comparison to other African countries. The low human population, coupled with remoteness, has provided a formula for wildlife stewardship. One of the most significant threats to environmental quality and biodiversity in Botswana is overgrazing of livestock, which reduces natural habitat and animal migration, (Onalenna, 2006) although the arid conditions combined with prevalence of non-palatable grasses has provided the Makgadikgadi with additional protection from livestock destruction.

REFERENCES.
* C. Michael Hogan, Mark Cooke and Helen Murray (2006) "The Waterberg Massif ", published by Lumina Technologies, May 22, 2006.
* A.Gieske (1996) "Modelling of the surface overflow of the Okavango delta'‘, Botswana Notes and Records, vol. 28, pp 165-192
* Graham McCulloch (2003) "The ecology of Sua Pan and its flamingo populations, PhD thesis, University of Dublin, Ireland
* Thomas Tlou and Alec Campbell (1984) "History of Botswana", MacMillan ISBN 99912-74-08-7
* Onalenna Doo Selowane (2006) "Botswana's Commonage: A Recipe for Environmental Disaster or Conservation?"

The author thanks Cyrus Dar, my guide in this region, for expert ecological assistance and for access to the Jacks Camp archaeological collection.

Makgadikgadi submitted by C_Michael_Hogan
Fossilised organic material, primarily specimens of date palm nuts. I retrieved these specimens from the dry lake bed of the Makgadikgadi. These fossils prove the nature of the lush tropical environment that existed here to support human life in the time epoch 300,000 to 20,000 years before present.

Makgadikgadi submitted by C_Michael_Hogan
This prehistoric lake bed edge is actually the edge of an island in the wet season. There is a particular richness of artifacts near this lake bed edge, suggesting that prehistoric man had settlements on these islands within the lake in the time frame 20,000 to 150,000 years before present, at a time frame when the lake existed but was much less extensive than its Pleistocene depth.

Makgadikgadi submitted by C_Michael_Hogan
Example stone tools I collected from the dry lake bed of the Makgadigadi. These tools date to at least 30,000 years before present, and the cruder one likely to 150,000 years before present. The GBP coin is used for reference sizing.

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