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The emergence of pottery in Africa during the tenth millennium cal BC: new evidence from Ounjougou (Mali)
2009
Antiquity
New excavations in ravines at Ounjougou in Mali have brought to light a lithic and ceramic assemblage that dates from before 9400 cal BC. The authors show that this first use of pottery coincides with a warm wet period in the Sahara. As in East Asia, where very early ceramics are also known, the pottery and small bifacial arrowheads were the components of a new subsistence strategy exploiting an ecology associated with abundant wild grasses. In Africa, however, the seeds were probably boiled (then as now) rather than made into bread.
doi:10.1017/s0003598x00099245
fatcat:5zirvbmul5cgln52q66osohkqu