Abstract

Knowledge of past environmental change and prehistoric settlement dynamics in the Sahel east of the Nile is limited due to the scarcity of suitable sedimentary archives and archaeological sites. Here we present tufa-based paleoenvironmental records from the area of NW Butana (central Sudan, ∼55 km southeast of the Nile River) which show that increased rainfall and spring activity occurred in several discrete intervals during the last ∼30,000 years. Lithostratigraphic data combined with phytolith, malacological, paleopedological, and stable carbon isotope records revealed humidity peaks during late MIS3 and the early and middle Holocene. Gaps in lithological records correlated with dry periods of the Last Glacial Maximum and Younger Dryas. Minor wet pulses coinciding with Late Glacial interstadials indicate an early intensification of the African monsoon, which implies that a sharp climatic boundary existed between the Sahel and the Sahara during this period.These new paleoenvironmental records, together with archaeological evidence from Butana, provide a unique opportunity for understanding human ecology in the eastern Sahel. The peoples who inhabited this dryland area 30+ km from the Nile Valley could not rely on its relatively predictable resources of riverine, floodplain and lake habitats. New models of subsistence and settlement, and strategies of adaptations to seasonal and interannual environmental variability are needed.

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