Abstract
This paper explores a variety of different attempts to reconstruct Quaternary environments in East and North Africa during the last century or so and shows how the research on African Quaternary environments has also had an impact on Quaternary research worldwide. One important lesson is that the uncritical acceptance of a single climatic model developed in one continent, such as the glacial pluvial model from North America, and its wholesale application to another continent, such as Africa, can prove highly misleading and can (and did) retard progress in reconstructing Quaternary environments in Africa by many years. The most recent wet climatic interval in East Africa and the Sahara occurred between 15,000 and 5,000 years ago, following a cold, dry and windy climatic interval during the late Pleistocene, when lakes dried out across East Africa, desert dunes were active in the Sahara, and huge plumes of desert dust were blown into the Atlantic. The repeated changes in Quaternary environments in East and North Africa exerted a powerful influence upon early human adaptations and migrations, culminating in the emergence of Neolithic plant and animal domestication in the Nile valley and the Sahara and the flowering of early Egyptian urban civilization.
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