Project Details
Boundaries, Frontiers, and Conduits in the Middle to Late Holocene Archaeology and Palaeoecology of the Inner Congo Basin
Applicant
Professor Dr. Hans-Peter Wotzka
Subject Area
Prehistory and World Archaeology
Term
since 2018
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 404628420
The project has four main objectives: (1) Tracing the immigration process that initiated the Early Iron Age in the equatorial rainforest of the Interior Congo Basin (Democratic Republic of the Congo) 2400 years ago. The starting point is the hypothesis that the Imbonga pottery associated with the process originates from the central region of the Republic of the Congo bordering to the west. Testing this through archaeological fieldwork along major rivers rising from the Ogowe-Congo watershed and draining into the Congo will aim at delineating a major Early Iron Age migration on the basis of material culture relics. (2) Creating a Holocene-Late Pleistocene palaeoecological baseline sequence for the Interior Congo Basin. Completion of ongoing pollen and geochemical analyses on a number of sediment cores from the Congo Basin Peatland Complex aims at establishing a first regional reference sequence. The intention is to reconstruct local palaeovegetation and hydroclimate records across key sites within the Congo River bend. This will allow to include the core zone of the equatorial rainforest in tests of hypotheses regarding (a) Late Pleistocene and Holocene rainforest refugia, (b) a supposed universal Central African Rainforest Crisis ~2500 years ago, and (c) coeval human-landscape entanglements. (3) Collecting palaeoecological records in the central Republic of the Congo. An east-west transect is to be created from the Inner Congo Basin across the Congo River by acquisition of two new sediment cores from the southwestern margin of the Congo Basin Peatland Complex. Investigation of this underresearched area will complement palaeoecological work currently taking place further north in the Republic of Congo. One of the most urgent research questions related to this area, the northern part of which extends into the biogeographic zone known as the Sangha River Interval, concerns the age of the regional savannas. Besides aiming at fossil pollen records, palynological work there should also include documentation of modern pollen rain in diverse vegetational settings to serve as reference data for the interpretation of regional vegetation history and historical ecology. (4) Reconstructing Early Iron Age economy and foodways in the Inner Congo Basin and adjacent areas to the west. A deepened understanding of incipient agriculture and human diet will be sought in order to be able to assess climatic and environmental framing of human economic and cultural choices. For this purpose, new excavations with archaeobotanical, archaeozoological and phytolith sampling and continued application of Organic Residue Analysis on well contextualised potsherds will be undertaken. In particular, it is of interest on which types of plant and animal food people relied and what they prepared in ceramic vessels, one major question being whether domestic animals were already kept before c. AD 1450, the time of the oldest faunal evidence from the Inner Congo Basin to date.
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