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Full Description
The ancient Sahara has often been treated as a periphery or barrier, but this agenda-setting book - the final volume of the Trans-Saharan Archaeology Series - demonstrates that it was teeming with technological innovations, knowledge transfer, and trade from long before the Islamic period. In each chapter, expert authors present important syntheses, and new evidence for technologies from oasis farming and irrigation, animal husbandry and textile weaving, to pottery, glass and metal making by groups inhabiting the Sahara and contiguous zones. Scientific analysis is brought together with anthropology and archaeology. The resultant picture of transformations in technologies between the third millennium BC and the second millennium AD is rich and detailed, including analysis of the relationship between the different materials and techniques discussed, and demonstrating the significance of the Sahara both in its own right and in telling the stories of neighbouring regions.
Contents
1. Debating Mobile Technologies Chloë N. Duckworth, Aurélie Cuénod and David J. Mattingly; 2. Technological Innovations Transfer Through the Hyper-Arid Belt Mario Liverani; 3. Diffusion of Irrigation Technologies in the Sahara Andrew Wilson, David J. Mattingly and Martin Sterry; 4. Crafts in Roman North Africa Touatia Amraoui; 5. Movement and Management of Animals from 1000 BC to AD 1000 B. Tyr Fothergill, Veerle Linseele and Silvia Valenzuela Lamas; 6. The Early History of Weaving in West Africa Sonja Magnavita; 7. Metalworking: A View from the Garamantian Oases Aurélie Cuénod; 8. Archaeometallurgical Record of Meroe in a Trans-Saharan Landscape Jane Humphris; 9. Meaning of the Variability in Ancient Ironworking in West Africa Caroline Robion-Brunner; 10. Shattering Illusions: Glass production and Trade Within Africa Chloë N. Duckworth; 11. Glass Beads in African Society Peter Robertshaw; 12. Three Millennia of Egyptian Glass Making Thilo Rehren and Daniela Rosenow; 13. Ceramic Technology: Trans-Saharan Perspectives Maria Carmela Gatto; 14. Concluding Discussion Chloë N. Duckworth, Aurélie Cuénod and David J. Mattingly