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Why Africa has no houses and other questions for deep history

Why Africa has no houses and other questions for deep history
Why Africa has no houses and other questions for deep history
Africa has the oldest artefacts and evidence for fire. It is where Homo sapiens evolved and developed novel technologies before dispersing into the rest of the world some 70ka ago. There is, however, no reliable evidence in Africa for artificial shelters and dwellings older than 20ka. This paper sets out to understand why such basic architecture appears so late in a continent with great environmental variation and a deep history of innovation. The approach combines evidence from micro and macro scales of analysis. The micro scale uses ethnoarchaeological studies of Africa’s small circular houses to examine how and why gender separates their occupants both spatially and through their access to agricultural stores. At the macro scale, the absence of food stores among Africa’s extant hunters and gatherers is predicted from environmental factors that apply to the whole continent. Without food storage there are no significant dwellings. I then turn to the archaeological evidence for the appearance of dwellings and storage from Africa and the Levant, a contiguous region where huts are known at 23ka. The evidence for dwellings in Europe is then considered. While dwellings are earlier here than in Africa and the Levant none are reliably older than 32ka. They are found with evidence for food storage. The paper explores the implications of this chronological framework for a major transition in hominin evolution that, before agriculture, involved intensification in subsistence combined with storage, and a novel architecture of gendered spaces found worldwide.
food storage, QTSTOR, dwellings, hearths, gendered spaces, African hunter-gatherers, ethnoarchaeology
0079-497X
Gamble, Clive
1cbd0b26-ddac-4dc2-9cf7-59c66d06103a
Gamble, Clive
1cbd0b26-ddac-4dc2-9cf7-59c66d06103a

Gamble, Clive (2025) Why Africa has no houses and other questions for deep history. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Africa has the oldest artefacts and evidence for fire. It is where Homo sapiens evolved and developed novel technologies before dispersing into the rest of the world some 70ka ago. There is, however, no reliable evidence in Africa for artificial shelters and dwellings older than 20ka. This paper sets out to understand why such basic architecture appears so late in a continent with great environmental variation and a deep history of innovation. The approach combines evidence from micro and macro scales of analysis. The micro scale uses ethnoarchaeological studies of Africa’s small circular houses to examine how and why gender separates their occupants both spatially and through their access to agricultural stores. At the macro scale, the absence of food stores among Africa’s extant hunters and gatherers is predicted from environmental factors that apply to the whole continent. Without food storage there are no significant dwellings. I then turn to the archaeological evidence for the appearance of dwellings and storage from Africa and the Levant, a contiguous region where huts are known at 23ka. The evidence for dwellings in Europe is then considered. While dwellings are earlier here than in Africa and the Levant none are reliably older than 32ka. They are found with evidence for food storage. The paper explores the implications of this chronological framework for a major transition in hominin evolution that, before agriculture, involved intensification in subsistence combined with storage, and a novel architecture of gendered spaces found worldwide.

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Accepted/In Press date: 2 June 2025
Keywords: food storage, QTSTOR, dwellings, hearths, gendered spaces, African hunter-gatherers, ethnoarchaeology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 503016
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503016
ISSN: 0079-497X
PURE UUID: 9a551916-632c-43a3-a519-fca36cbaef19
ORCID for Clive Gamble: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2897-0485

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Date deposited: 16 Jul 2025 16:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 04:02

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