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摘要

为了找到非洲畜牧业的起源,考古学家寻找动物的野生祖先是很重要的。非洲的野羊(Ammotragus lervia)从未被驯化过,所以所有的家养绵羊和山羊都来自近东。关于非洲牛是否被独立驯化一直存在一些争论,因为在尼罗河谷发现了野生牛(Bos primigenius)的遗骸。遗传证据表明,大约8000年前,非洲驯养牛的起源是黎凡特。由于环境有利于放牧,此时的水源充足,牛群遍布撒哈拉沙漠。这种情况一直持续到5000 bp之后,热带辐合带(ITCZ)退缩,撒哈拉沙漠干涸到现在的状态。采采屏障也在这个时候撤退了,允许牧民向南迁移到西非,并通过埃塞俄比亚高地到达东非,大约4500年前,尽管他们又花了1000年的时间才完全适应肯尼亚南部和坦桑尼亚的草原。随后,国内的采采蝇种群通过一条无采采蝇走廊进入非洲南部,大约在2000年前到达。在整个非洲,放牧社会对当地猎人的影响似乎是一开始的和解,后来关系变得强硬。在东非,这可能是因为需要在当地猎人的帮助下了解新环境,并适应新的动物传染病。在非洲南部,第一批牧民主要是公元前1000年的牧羊人,从那时起很少发现牛的骨头。大约1000年前,当牧民发展出历史上的Khoekhoen人时,他们才成为完全成熟的牧民。在南部非洲还存在着进一步的争论,即那里的畜牧业是移民牧民到达喀拉哈里北部然后传播到开普的结果,还是当地猎人开始放牧的结果。
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Pastoralism in Africa
To find the origins of African pastoralism it is important archaeologists look for the wild progenitors of animals. The wild sheep of Africa (Ammotragus lervia) were never domesticated, so all domestic sheep and goats came from the Near East. There has been some debate over whether there was an independent domestication of African cattle, because wild cattle (Bos primigenius) remains have been found in the Nile Valley. Genetic evidence shows that the source of African domesticated cattle was the Levant, some 8,000 years ago. Cattle spread across the Sahara as the environment was conducive to pastoralism, being well watered at this time. This lasted until after 5000 bp when the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) retreated and the Sahara dried up to its present condition. The tsetse barrier also retreated at this time, allowing pastoralists to move south into West Africa and, via the Ethiopian highlands, to East Africa, arriving c.4500 bp, although it took another 1,000 years for them to fully adapt to the grasslands of southern Kenya and Tanzania. Domestic stock then went on to southern Africa via a tsetse-free corridor, arriving around 2000 bp. The effect of herding societies on local hunters throughout Africa appears to have been an initial rapprochement, with a later hardening of relations. In East Africa, this was probably due to the need to learn about the new environment with the help of local hunters and to adjust to new epizootic diseases. In southern Africa, the first pastoralists were primarily sheep herders during the 1st millennium bce, with few cattle bones being found from this time. Pastoralists only became fully fledged cattle herdsmen around 1000 bp when they developed the attributes of the historic Khoekhoen. A further debate existed in southern Africa over whether pastoralism there was the result of immigrant herders who arrived in the northern Kalahari and then spread to the Cape, or if local hunters took up sheep herding.
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