Loftus Emma, Steyn Maryna, Lombard Marlize, Chase Brian M
Institut für Vor- und Frühgeschichtliche Archäologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Geschwister-Scholl Platz 1, Munich, 80539, Germany.
Palaeo-Research Institute, University of Johannesburg, Auckland Park, P.O. Box 524, ZA-2006, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Sci Rep. 2025 Jul 1;15(1):22233. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-05471-6.
South Africa's Iron Age (c. 250 CE - 1850 CE) was a period of socio-economic transitions. With the spread of Bantu-speaking peoples from western Africa, the region saw the development of settled agriculturalist societies, the rise of complex chiefdoms, and the development of early states such as Mapungubwe. Questions about how settlements and demographics were influenced by environmental factors are central to the study of this period. Climatic conditions directly impact carrying capacity and agricultural productivity. It is therefore likely that climate variability was an important factor in the success of farming communities, determining food security, population movements, and settlement expansions or abandonments. In this paper we focus on northeastern South Africa and employ the frequency of archaeological human burials and highly resolved palaeoclimate records to assess the relationship between population dynamics and climate change. This reveals significant subregional variability in both human burial frequency and climate change across the subcontinent. Within the subregions, burial frequency shows a positive correlation with humidity, indicating that climatic factors played a pivotal role in shaping the pattern and size of settlements during this period.
南非的铁器时代(约公元250年至公元1850年)是一个社会经济转型的时期。随着讲班图语的民族从西非扩散开来,该地区出现了定居的农业社会、复杂酋邦的兴起以及诸如马蓬古布韦等早期国家的发展。关于定居点和人口统计学如何受到环境因素影响的问题,是这一时期研究的核心。气候条件直接影响承载能力和农业生产力。因此,气候变异性很可能是农耕社区成功的一个重要因素,决定着粮食安全、人口流动以及定居点的扩张或废弃。在本文中,我们聚焦于南非东北部,并利用考古人类墓葬的频率和高分辨率的古气候记录来评估人口动态与气候变化之间的关系。这揭示了整个次大陆在人类墓葬频率和气候变化方面存在显著的次区域变异性。在这些次区域内,墓葬频率与湿度呈正相关,表明气候因素在这一时期塑造定居点的模式和规模方面发挥了关键作用。