Nasura Pillar Site in Nasura kangatotha ward Turkana, Kenya | |
Location | Lake Turkana, Kenya |
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Region | kangatotha ward |
Coordinates | 3°25′22″N 35°48′10″E / 3.422778°N 35.802778°E |
History of Kenya |
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Kenya portal |
The Nasura Pillar Site, registered as GcJh3 and also known as Namoratunga II, is an archaeological site on the west side of Lake Turkana in Kenya dating to the Pastoral Neolithic. Namoratunga means "people of stone" in the Turkana language. The site was originally believed to have been created around 300 BC, but recent excavations have yielded an older radiocarbon sample dating to 2398 +/- 44 years BC.[1]
Background
The site is located 50 Kilometres off the Lodwar – Kalokol highway, an it is easily visible on 30 metres (98 ft) from the road. The Kalokol Pillar Site contains 19 basalt pillars which are surrounded by a circular formation of stones. A number of other pillar sites surround Lake Turkana as well and date to the same time period; Lothagam North and Manemanya, for example, are communal cemeteries. These sites were likely built by the region's earliest herders.[2] Another burial site with stone cairns, Namoratunga I, [3][4] also known as Lokori, does not have stone pillars.[5][6][7]
Archaeologists Mark Lynch and L.H. Robbins described the Kalokol Pillar Site in 1978 and identified it as a possible archaeoastronomical site.[8] Lynch believed the basalt pillars tie the constellations or stars to the 12-month 354-day lunar calendar of Cushitic speakers of southern Ethiopia. The pillars were said to align with seven star systems: Triangulum, Pleiades, Bellatrix, Aldebaran, Central Orion, Saiph, and Sirius. Other archaeologists have reanalyzed the archaeoastronomical evidence,[9] and an older radiocarbon date from the Kalokol Pillar Site now calls into question these interpretations.[1]
Further reading
- Doyle, L.R. (1986). "The Borana Calendar Reinterpreted". Current Anthropology. 27 (3): 286–287. doi:10.1086/203439. S2CID 144426218.
- Doyle, L.R.; Frank, E.W. (1997). H. Selin (ed.). "Astronomy of Africa". Encyclopedia of the History of Science, Technology and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Kluwer, Netherlands: 96–99.
See also
References
- 1 2 Hildebrand, Elisabeth A.; Shea, John J.; Grillo, Katherine M. (2011). "Four middle Holocene pillar sites in West Turkana, Kenya". Journal of Field Archaeology. 36 (3): 181–200. doi:10.1179/009346911X12991472411088. S2CID 54739651.
- ↑ Hildebrand, Elisabeth; et al. (2018). "A monumental cemetery built by eastern Africa's first herders near Lake Turkana, Kenya". PNAS. 115 (36): 8942–8947. doi:10.1073/pnas.1721975115. PMC 6130363. PMID 30127016.
- ↑ 2°23′0.04″N 36°8′2.52″E / 2.3833444°N 36.1340333°E
- ↑ Kubiak, M. (1982). "Eclipse at Namoratunga". The Observatory. 102: 211. Bibcode:1982Obs...102..210K.
- ↑ Helaine, Seline (1997). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Springer. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-7923-4066-9.
- ↑ Krupp, Edwin C. (2003). Echoes of the Ancient Skies: The Astronomy of Lost Civilizations. Dover. pp. 170–172. ISBN 978-0-486-42882-6.
- ↑ Dvorsky, George (20 August 2018). "Ancient Cemetery Packed With Hundreds of Bodies Discovered in Kenya".
- ↑ Robbins, L. H.; Lynch, B. M. (19 May 1978). "Namoratunga: The First Archeoastronomical Evidence in Sub-Saharan Africa". Science. 200 (4343): 766–768. Bibcode:1978Sci...200..766L. doi:10.1126/science.200.4343.766. ISSN 1095-9203. PMID 17743241. S2CID 31531630.
- ↑ Doyle, Laurance R.; Wilcox, Thomas J. (1986). "Statistical Analysis of Namoratunga: An Archaeoastronomical Site in Sub-Saharan Africa?". Azania. 21 (1): 125–129. doi:10.1080/00672708609511373.