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摘要

博茨瓦纳的史前史涉及复杂的环境知识、经济策略和以狩猎采集者、牧民和农牧社区为家的社会网络。从异质到等级制的各种生存策略和社会结构都对气候和环境变量做出了灵活的反应。博茨瓦纳在非洲内陆和印度洋的前殖民贸易中也发挥了核心作用,但往往被忽视。博茨瓦纳拥有保存完好的石器时代中期、石器时代晚期和铁器时代的考古记录,其中包括世界上最集中的岩石艺术之一——措迪洛山。博茨瓦纳的史前史延续了10万多年,包括在各种各样的环境区域中成功的、创新的和适应性的职业,从奥卡万戈三角洲到卡拉哈里沙漠,再到东部水分充足的硬草原地区。石器时代的人们适应干旱和潮湿的土地,考古记录包括淡水鱼开采的早期证据。用骨尖狩猎的历史可以追溯到3.5万年前,另有证据表明,在2.1万至3万年前,人们发现了有毒的、可逆的箭头。通过在Tsodilo山发现的岩画、岩刻以及故意破坏和遗弃石器等仪式化行为的证据,为了解早期人类的社会层面提供了进一步的见解。在铁器时代,狩猎采集者社区和农牧民在欧洲人参与之前的一千年里就参与了跨印度洋的区域性和后来的原始全球贸易;随着区域经济的发展,像Bosutswe这样的大型政治组织甚至像Butua这样的王国出现了,它们控制着诸如游戏、象牙、盐、投机石和黄金等资源的获取。在现代,像老帕拉皮(普拉茨韦)这样的遗址的历史考古学为历史文献提供了额外的见解,这些文献可能与欧洲中心对博茨瓦纳过去的理解相矛盾。
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Archaeology of Botswana
The prehistory of Botswana concerns the sophisticated environmental knowledge, economic strategies, and social networks of the hunter-gatherer, pastoralists, and agropastoralist communities that have called Botswana home. Diverse subsistence strategies and societal structures ranging from heterarchical to hierarchical have coincided and responded flexibly to climate and environmental variables. Botswana has also played a central, but often overlooked, role in precolonial trade within the interior of Africa and across the Indian Ocean. Botswana contains well-preserved archaeological records for the Middle Stone Age, Late Stone Age, and Iron Age periods, including one of the highest concentrations of rock art in the world at Tsodilo Hills. The prehistory of Botswana extends over 100,000 years and includes successful, innovative, and adaptive occupations in a wide variety of environmental zones, from the Okavango Delta to the Kalahari sandveld, and better-watered hardveld areas in the east. Stone Age peoples adapted to both arid and wet lands, and the archaeological record includes early evidence for freshwater fish exploitation. Hunting with bone points dates to 35,000 years ago, with additional evidence for poisonous, reversible arrowheads between 21,000 and 30,000 years ago. Evidence for ritualized behavior through rock paintings, rock carvings, and the intentional destruction and abandonment of stone tools at Tsodilo Hills provides further insights to the social dimensions of early peoples. In the Iron Age, hunter-gatherer communities and agropastoralists participated in a regional and later protoglobal trade across the Indian Ocean for a thousand years before European involvement; as the regional economy intensified, large polities such as Bosutswe and even kingdoms such as the Butua state emerged, controlling access to resources such as game, ivory, salt, specularite, and gold. In the modern era, the historical archaeology of sites such as Old Palapye (Phalatswe) provide additional insight to historical documents that can contradict Eurocentric understandings of Botswana’s past.
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