ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI—Ancient nomadic herders may have been a key catalyst to the development of biodiversity in Africa’s Serengeti grasslands, according to a report in New Scientist. A new study finds that dung left behind by herds penned in for the night appear to have provided important concentrations of nutrients in grassland that was otherwise barren. Grassy glades in the Serengeti had been thought to date back some 1,000 years. To see whether they dated back farther, Fiona Marshall of Washington University in St Louis and colleagues sampled layers of earth beneath five previously known ancient pastoral sites in southwestern Kenya. They uncovered dung deposits dating back between 1,550 and 3,700 years. Within the deposits, they found ample remains of plants the livestock had eaten. “Our findings show that African savannahs thought of as ‘untouched’ environments stretching back millions of years are more biodiverse as a result of the spread of the earliest herders,” said Marshall. To read about a massacre that occurred in what is now Kenya around 10,000 years ago, go to “The First Casus Belli.”
Nomadic Herders Helped Increase Serengeti’s Biodiversity
News August 30, 2018
SHARE:
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2018
Nomadic Necropolis
(Courtesy Katherine Grillo )
Artifacts March/April 2022
Paleolithic Beads
(Jennifer Miller)
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2021
Ship of Ivory
(National Museum of Namibia, Windhoek)
(The Stapleton Collection/Bridgeman Images)
-
Features July/August 2018
The City at the Beginning of the World
The only Maya city with an urban grid may embody a creation myth
(Courtesy Timothy Pugh/Itza Archaeological Project) -
Letter from England July/August 2018
Inside the Anarchy
Archaeologists explore the landscape of England’s first civil war
(Kate Ravilious) -
Artifacts July/August 2018
Roman Boxing Gloves
(Courtesy Vindolanda Trust) -
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2018
Sun Storm
(Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty Images)