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Post-Pleistocene Archaeology and Geomorphological Processes on the Namib Desert Coast of South Western Africa
Authors:John Kinahan  Jill Kinahan
Institution:1. School of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;2. Namib Desert Archaeological Survey, Windhoek, Namibiajkinahan@iafrica.com.na;4. Namib Desert Archaeological Survey, Windhoek, Namibia;5. University of Namibia, Windhoek, Namibia
Abstract:ABSTRACT

The Namib Desert coast is rich in potential food resources, but its extreme aridity imposed severe limits on human settlement in the past. It appears that intensive use of the coast began in the Middle Holocene, although there is evidence of intermittent occupation from the Middle Pleistocene. Coastal sites were closely linked to the desert interior and movement between the two was mainly via the linear oases of ephemeral river systems. Contact was at first sporadic but regular trade with merchant vessels was established in the mid-eighteenth century AD. Coastal geomorphological processes determined the location and accessibility of marine resources used by hunter-gatherer and nomadic pastoral communities. At the same time, marine, fluvial, and aeolian processes have influenced the visibility and survival of archaeological evidence on the coast.
Keywords:coastal geomorphology  coastal middens  Holocene  hunter-gatherers  Namib Desert  nomadic pastoralists
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