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Berbers are primarily not African ?
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Trollkillah # Ish Gebor: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by xyyman: [qb] Really great information TP. The Lioness is not in your league why bother with him and his simplistic analytical ability. Picture spamming. Are there comparable towns/cities in Iberia/Europe at 15000BC? [QUOTE]Originally posted by Trollkillah # Ish Gebor: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [qb] ^^^ and where are these from and what time period? [/qb][/QUOTE]I have told you this repeatedly, Holocene-Mesolithic timeframe. And the whole puzzle is falling in it's right place. Where collected the pieces and put them in the right place. It's almost done! [QUOTE] The ruins were discovered deep in the desert of Western Sahara. The remains of a prehistoric town dating back 15,000 years have been discovered in the Moroccan-administered territory of Western Sahara. [/QUOTE] http://www.aljazeera.com/archive/2004/08/20084914442080115.html Topology Atlas || Conferences "Rapid and catastrophic environmental changes in the Holocene and human response" first joint meeting of IGCP 490 and ICSU Environmental catastrophes in Mauritania, the desert and the coast January 4-18, 2004 Mali). Marseille: 65-86. Date received: January 27, 2004 http://at.yorku.ca/c/a/m/u/27.htm [/qb][/QUOTE][/qb][/QUOTE]It simply is just all too overwhelming, [QUOTE] Large-scale climate change forms the backdrop to the beginnings of food production in northeastern Africa (Kröpelin et al. 2008). Hunter-gatherer communities deserted most of the northern interior of the continent during the arid glacial maximum and took refuge along the North African coast, the Nile Valley, and the southern fringes of the Sahara (Barich and Garcea 2008; Garcea 2006; Kuper and Kröpelin 2006). [b]During the subsequent Early Holocene African humid phase, from the mid-eleventh to the early ninth millennium cal BP, ceramic-using hunter-gatherers took advantage of more favorable savanna conditions to resettle much of northeastern Africa (Holl 2005; Kuper and Kröpelin 2006). Evidence of domestic animals first appeared in sites in the Western Desert of Egypt, the Khartoum region of the Nile, northern Niger, the Acacus Mountains of Libya, and Wadi Howar[/b] (Garcea 2004, 2006; Pöllath and Peters 2007; fig. 1).[/QUOTE]--Fiona Marshall Domestication Processes and Morphological Change Through the Lens of the Donkey and African Pastoralism Fiona Marshall and Lior Weissbrod [QUOTE]This context leads us to consider the notion of refugia. Figure 1 presents the main zones colonised by humans in western Africa. When the fossil valleys of Azaouad, Tilemsi and Azaouagh became dry, after ca. 5,000 yr BP, humans had to find refuges in the Sahelian belt, and gathered around topographic features (like the Adrar des Iforas, and the Mauritanians Dhar) and major rivers, especially the Niger Interior Delta, called the Mema. [/QUOTE]--Suzanne Leroy, Aziz Ballouche, Mohamed Salem Ould Sabar, and Sylvain Philip (Hommes et Montagnes travel agency) "Rapid and catastrophic environmental changes in the Holocene and human response" first joint meeting of IGCP 490 and ICSU Environmental catastrophes in Mauritania, the desert and the coast (2004) And the Adrar Zerzem completely debunked the recent slave transportation. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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