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On the Origins and Dissemination of Domesticated Sorghum and Pearl Millet across Africa and into India: a View from the Butana Group of the Far Eastern Sahel
Authors:Frank Winchell,Michael Brass  author-information"  >,Andrea Manzo,Alemseged Beldados,Valentina Perna,Charlene Murphy,Chris Stevens,Dorian Q. Fuller
Affiliation:1.Independent Researcher,Arlington,USA;2.Institute of Archaeology,University College London,London,UK;3.Department of Asian, African and Mediterranean Studies,University of Naples “L’Orientale”,Naples,Italy;4.Department of Archaeology and Heritage Management,Addis Ababa University,Addis Ababa,Ethiopia
Abstract:Four decades have passed since Harlan and Stemler (1976) proposed the eastern Sahelian zone as the most likely center of Sorghum bicolor domestication. Recently, new data on seed impressions on Butana Group pottery, from the fourth millennium BC in the southern Atbai region of the far eastern Sahelian Belt in Africa, show evidence for cultivation activities of sorghum displaying some domestication traits. Pennisetum glaucum may have been undergoing domestication shortly thereafter in the western Sahel, as finds of fully domesticated pearl millet are present in southeastern Mali by the second half of the third millennium BC, and present in eastern Sudan by the early second millennium BC. The dispersal of the latter to India took less than 1000 years according to present data. Here, we review the middle Holocene Sudanese archaeological data for the first time, to situate the origins and spread of these two native summer rainfall cereals in what is proposed to be their eastern Sahelian Sudan gateway to the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean trade.
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