Seidensticker Dirk, Hubau Wannes, Verschuren Dirk, Fortes-Lima Cesar, de Maret Pierre, Schlebusch Carina M, Bostoen Koen
Department of Languages and Cultures, BantUGent-UGent Centre for Bantu Studies, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Royal Museum for Central Africa, Service of Wood Biology, Tervuren, Belgium.
Sci Adv. 2021 Feb 12;7(7). doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abd8352. Print 2021 Feb.
The present-day distribution of Bantu languages is commonly thought to reflect the early stages of the Bantu Expansion, the greatest migration event in African prehistory. Using 1149 radiocarbon dates linked to 115 pottery styles recovered from 726 sites throughout the Congo rainforest and adjacent areas, we show that this is not the case. Two periods of more intense human activity, each consisting of an expansion phase with widespread pottery styles and a regionalization phase with many more local pottery styles, are separated by a widespread population collapse between 400 and 600 CE followed by major resettlement centuries later. Coinciding with wetter climatic conditions, the collapse was possibly promoted by a prolonged epidemic. Comparison of our data with genetic and linguistic evidence further supports a spread-over-spread model for the dispersal of Bantu speakers and their languages.
班图语如今的分布情况通常被认为反映了班图扩张的早期阶段,这是非洲史前史上最大规模的迁徙事件。我们利用从刚果雨林及周边地区726个遗址中发掘出的与115种陶器风格相关的1149个放射性碳年代数据,表明情况并非如此。人类活动较为频繁的两个时期,每个时期都包括一个陶器风格广泛传播的扩张阶段和一个地方陶器风格更多的区域化阶段,这两个时期之间在公元400年至600年期间出现了广泛的人口崩溃,几个世纪后又有大规模的重新定居。与更湿润的气候条件相吻合,这次崩溃可能是由一场长期的流行病促成的。将我们的数据与基因和语言证据进行比较,进一步支持了班图语使用者及其语言传播的“扩散-再扩散”模型。