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This book focuses on the issues of resilience and variability of desert pastoralists, explicitly challenging a set of traditional topics of the discourse around pastoralism in arid lands of the Old World. Based on a field research carried out on the Kel Tadrart Tuareg in Libya, various facets of a surprisingly successful adaptation to an extremely arid environment are investigated. By means of an ethnoarchaeological approach, explored are the Kel Tadrart interactions with natural resources, the settlement patterns, the campsite structures, and the formation of the pastoral archaeological landscape, focusing on variability and its causes. The resilience of the Kel Tadrart is the key to understand the reasons of their choice to stay and live in the almost rainless Acacus Mountains, in spite of strong pressure to sedentarize in the neighboring oases. Through the collection of the interviews, participant observation, mapping of inhabited and abandoned campsites, remote sensing, and archival sources, various and different Kel Tadrart strategies, perceptions, and material cultures are examined. This book fills an important gap in the ethnoarchaeological research in central Sahara and in the study of desert pastoralism. Desert lands are likely to increase over the next decades but, our knowledge of human adaptations to these areas of the world is still patchy and generally biased by the idea that extremely arid lands are not suited for human occupation.
Explores the Kel Tadrart interactions with natural resources, the settlement patterns, the campsite structures, and the formation of the pastoral archaeological landscape This book fills an important gap in the research on the historical age in central Sahara and, in general, in the study of desert pastoralism Focuses on the various facets of a surprisingly successful adaptation to an extremely arid environment in Libyan Sahara Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Auteur
Stefano Biagetti (Ph.D. 2012 Institute of Archaeology, University College London) is an ethnoarchaeologist who has been involved in Saharan studies since 2002. He was research fellow at the 'Sapienza' University of Rome (until November 2012), studying the development of pastoralism in SW Libya, from prehistory to current societies. He is currently fellow of 'The Italian Society for Ethnoarchaeology' (Rome). In 2014 he has been awarded of a Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship to be held (from October 2014) at the Complexity and Socio-Ecological Dynamics Research Group (CaSEs, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona), focusing on the study of resilience in arid lands, and on the variability of pastoralism in marginal environments. He has published in major journals such as Nature, Journal of African Archaeology, Journal of Arid Environments, Azania, and African Archaeological Review.
Contenu
Chapter 1: Research Objectives, Materials and Methods.- Chapter 2: The Environment.- Chapter 3: The Kel Tadrart Tuareg: ethnohistorical and ethnographic background.- Chapter 4: The Regional Level of Analysis.- Chapter 5: Site Specific Analysis: Composition and Layout.- Chapter 6: The abandoned Campsites in the Tadrart Acacus.- Chapter 7: Ethnoarchaeological suggestions for a review of the last 3,000 years in the Tadrart Acacus.- Chapter 8: Conclusions. <p