Prehistoric animal tracks, Swahili ruins and Climate Change impacts in Tanzania

The Discovery Programme’s Landscape and Maritime Archaeologist, Dr Edward Pollard, recently undertook fieldwork to implement climate change adaptation measures at key World Heritage sites in Tanzania.

Here he describes his experience of working with a collaborative team of colleagues from the University of Dar es Salaam, University of St Andrews, National Museum of Tanzania, Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority (NCAA), the Discovery Programme, and the University of Wales Trinity Saint David.

Tanzania has several World Heritage Sites including Ngorongoro Conservation Area, and the rock art at Kondoa, both in the Rift Valley, and the Swahili sites of Zanzibar Stone Town, and Ruins of Kilwa Kisiwani on the Indian Ocean coast. I returned last week from two weeks of fieldwork and training to implement measures to mitigate climate change impacts on heritage sites, one in the north east of Tanzania, the other on the coast. This concentrated on the world-famous Laetoli early hominin footprint trackway, and a recently identified 19th-century slave trade warehouse complex at Winde, on the mainland side of the Zanzibar Channel.

 

Ngorongoro has the famous volcanic caldera filled with wildlife but also encompasses archaeological and palaeontological sites of Laetoli and Olduvai showing how our ancestors and relatives lived across millions of years. Staying the first week at the Endulen Catholic Mission, about a 27km drive from Laetoli. Breakfast varied between oranges, roast potato, pancakes, soup, chapati (flatbread), mandazi (doughnut), and banana. This was supplemented with some honey bought from local Maasai who have hives hanging from the baobab trees.

As part of the conservation area giraffes and zebra were grazing especially near the watering holes every day driving to work. While walking, a warden with a gun had to accompany us, as there are prides of lions presiding over the conservation area. Evidence of elephants recently passing through could be seen by broken trees, dung and stripped bark. Laetoli is about 1,700 m above sea level so was up to 30°C during the day, but cold at night. It was the dry season so there were a few mosquitoes, but I still climbed into sleeping bag at night for extra warmth after tucking the edges of the mosquito net under the mattress so nothing bigger than 2mm could get in.

We met the first day at the Wardens House for introductions and to download of a phone app to digitally capture heritage. The first day involved the visit to the site of the famous early hominin track. The first set of footprints, lying on a cemented ash layer produced by a volcanic eruption and dated at 3.66 million years ago, were recorded by Mary Leakey in 1978. About 40 years later, Fidelis Masao and Elgidius Ichumbaki recorded the second set of footprint a few meters from the earlier recorded site. It is assumed that these were made by Australopithecus afarensis, the same species as the skeleton known as ‘Lucy’, found in 1974 in the Afar region of Ethiopia. The footprints were conclusive evidence that our ancestors were walking upright before brain-size increased.

The footprints were conclusive evidence that our ancestors were walking upright before brain-size increased

The original track and later footprint discoveries were covered in the 1980s by plastic and basalt boulders to protect them from erosion by people, animals and the rainy season. A new Government sponsored building with a high roof covering the tracks was under construction during my visit with plans to uncover the tracks again to see if they have been preserved. Many tourists leave disappointed because they could not see the footprints, but the animal track layer can be traced intermittently for about 2.5km up the valley, which become exposed and eroded during the rainy season. It was an aim of our visit to map these out making them more widely known that there are more sites to see and explore, so visitors can have a more fulfilling experience.

Following the different layers of rock, it was possible to find this animal track layer from over three million years ago in several locations along the valley. Some footprints have such a wide diameter they must be an elephant relative such as a mastodon, but also similar giraffe and buffalo could be recognised. Dust had to be brushed off to fully expose the prints for photogrammetry. One set of marks has been described as footprints of a predator dragging its kill across the mud. Surrounding softer layers have bone beds of ancestors of the modern megafauna including rhino bone, zebra tooth, warthog tusk and rhino bone. Concrete blocks with letters and numbers carved into their surface mark where hominin bones have previously been found.

One set of marks has been described as footprints of a predator dragging its kill across the mud

The site is on the slopes of a seasonal river valley where artefacts from a range of different periods can be found including Middle Stone Age (Middle Palaeolithic) from 300,000 to 50,000 years ago to Late Stone Age beginning 50,000 years ago and pottery perhaps from around 1000 years ago was found at one location.

Today the pastoralist Maasai, who arrived around the 18th century, have settlements in the area and often pass by with their goats and cows curious at the visitors.

Over the week, GPS was used to record positions of bone, worked flakes of quartz, basalt, chert, and quartzite. Electromagnetic Methods of geophysics were tested to find evidence of earlier river channels and springs that could be contemporary with the sites. High-resolution drone imagery mapped the artefacts that were recorded by GPS so future monitoring may be able to identify them as they are exposed over wide areas. After collection, artefacts were 3D scanned back in the Warden’s House.

It was apparent how vulnerable these tracks are being exposed during rainy seasons by channels cutting the beds, waterfalls eroding upriver, and the crumbling of the edges and wearing as people walk across these exposures as they form convenient paths in the dry season. The importance of recording them as they appear and before they are wiped away was evident.

About 45km from Laetoli is “Olduvai Gorge”. There have been decolonisation initiatives here and “Olduvai” is now known as Oldupai, the Maasai word for Mother-in-Law’s Tongue or Snake Plant that is common in the gorge. The warehouses at the research laboratories at the Leakey camp have extensive bone collections from previous and continuing expeditions in this area.

Over the next two days we drove east and south passing the extinct volcanoes Mount Meru and Kilimanjaro, and through the Eastern Arc Mountains. Arriving in the port of Bagamoyo, famous for boat building and being the terminus of the caravan trade in the 19th century. Winde is about 20km north of Bagamoyo. This is the southern area of the Wami Delta, a 20km wide area of coast covered by mangrove swamp, beach ridges, islands and tidal channels that are difficult to navigate without a boat. Surveying the beach ridges, that have grown seaward over the centuries, revealed dense concentrations of pottery, mostly undecorated local earthenware, and stone gravestones dating from the 16th to the 19th centuries. This suggests that there were industries here in pottery, salt and mangrove poles, and perhaps even trading in ivory and enslaved people.

The area had not had much investigation until recent studies by Professor Ichumbaki of the University of Dar es Salaam. Parts of a complex of ruins precariously remain on a sand bar between the sea and tidal channels of the delta. It’s remote and difficult to reach location today may suggest smuggling activities to Zanzibar during Colonial rule, but we mustn’t underestimate how linked places were by the sea in the past compared to road travel today. Therefore, the ruins today could mark an important port for exporting goods from the mainland to Zanzibar, which lies 35km directly east.

We had to take the two-hour motorboat to Winde as the land route was impassable due to the rainy season extending into June this year, part of the unpredictability in recent years attributed to climate change. Therefore, there were many seasonal lakes that would bog down the vehicles approaching the site. Using the boat, landing was difficult, as the delta is exposed to the SW monsoon, which is prevalent at this time of year. However, there is evidence from the eroding artefacts on the landward side of the site, and the remains of channels, that boats may have harboured with the delta estuary.

There was evidence that these ruins were once more extensive, as more parts can be found 70m lower down on the foreshore suggesting the beach ridge once extended at least this distance. We also walked past peat deposits on the beach, further evidence that the delta is continuing to erode in the present climate. Glass beads and bottles, European porcelain and gun flints were found eroding on the landward side of the sand bar. Tracks of a hippo disappearing into the mangroves from the ruins made us pause before exploring further – although these animals are more likely to be sheltering from the sun in the river channels at this time of day.

The evidence of charcoal-making could be seen while surveying, as the bags of charcoal are stacked close to the channels before being smuggled by boat to Zanzibar. It’s an illegal activity unless the charcoal maker has a permit. Several large fires were seen when surveying as this often lights surrounding vegetation. This deforestation exposes the sediments to extra erosion by rainfall, sea and the tidal channels. We recorded some artefacts at the back of the ruin and looked at the test pit laid open from last year to see if the sand in it was from a tsunami or cyclone.

Much of the site had quickly grown over with grass and shrub since clearing last year so would need clearing again before doing drone survey. However, the use of a multispectral drone revealed changes in vegetation that could be anthropogenic features.

Coring in the mangroves for evidence of storms over-topping the barrier beach was suggested as a method to determine past cyclones and tsunamis that could have affected the site. After unsuccessfully trying to persuade a boat owner to let me paddle a canoe upriver to reach the islands in the delta and examine the stratigraphy in the river cut sections, Richard suggested to bring fold-out canoes next year.

 

Coring in the mangroves for evidence of storms over-topping the barrier beach was suggested as a method to determine past cyclones and tsunamis that could have affected the site

Packed lunch back on the beach consisted of potato, roast meat, chapati and roast banana though ants had found our food and had to be brushed off. For the second day of this, I learnt that washing the ants off in the sea first was more successful than brushing and shaking. The rough journey on the way back resulted in numerous wave soakings and early stages of hypothermia that required the warm hoodie again despite it being about 20°C in the evening. Back in Bagamoyo, the mosquitoes were great in number and not afraid to bite so I grabbed dinner from the table on the terrace and ran inside as the rooms had been sprayed. More coconut is used in the food with fish when the sea is not too rough for fishing.

As the team started to leave, data was exchanged, and goat was barbequed with pilau and kachumbari (onion and tomato salad).

The final few days were spent surveying easier to reach sites upriver in the Ruvu and Wami rivers continuing surveys from previous years. Being able to keep lunch of left-over goat and banana in a vehicle saved it from the ants. It is interesting how artefacts become older landward with Chinese porcelain and Late Stone Age flakes and hammerstones suggesting differences in sea level and sedimentation. Cultivation ridges were good to look at as the disturbed soil often brought pottery to the surface. This often led to introductions to and welcomes by the farmers. At one point we came to a quarry where a group of Maasai woman doing the washing in the stream who said they had also have come down from Ngorongoro, though I suspect their journey with animals grazing took a lot longer than ours.

To break up the journey on the way to the airport in Dar es Salaam, we stopped at the Kunduchi Ruins that have sacred baobabs and graves, some of which still having the porcelain intact in the pillar tombs. The standing buildings are around 18th century though the pottery indicated occupation here from the late first millennium.

The team, funded by the British Council’s Cultural Protection Fund, involved cooperation between the University of Saint Andrews, University of Dar es Salaam, National Museum of Tanzania, Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority (NCAA), Discovery Programme, and the University of Wales Trinity Saint David.