mirrored file at http://SaturnianCosmology.Org/ 
For complete access to all the files of this collection
	see http://SaturnianCosmology.org/search.php 
==========================================================
_Lower Paleolithic: c. 2 Mil. - 100,000 BC_

As hard as may be to believe, there was an Egypt before the Pharaohs.
Over a century ago, Charles Darwin, without any real evidence to back
up his theory, set forth the statement that Africa might have been the
cradle of the human race. Today, we still have no conclusive proof,
but many signs point to one of the first civilizations created by
human-like beings might have been in the Nile Valley around [1]700,000
years ago, if not earlier. Possible evidence to push the date back
much earlier was found at Olduvai.

The Olduvai Gorge site in Tanzania is the oldest archaeological site
in the world. Discovered by Dr. Mary D. Leakey and her husband, Louis
Leakey, it contains the remains of large hominids (humanlike
creatures) almost two million years old, which they labeled as
_Zinjanthropus boisei_. But even more important than the remains
themselves was the large amount of animal bones and crude stone tools
found with them, evidence that these were intelligent beings. The
existence of these stone tools prompted archaeologists to label them
the "Olduwan [2]Industry."

Remains of _boisei_ and similar hominids, as well as the shelters they
built and tools they used have been found in many places in Africa,
from Lake Rudolph in eastern Africa, to South Africa, to the Afar and
Omo river valleys in Ethiopia. Unfortunately, to date, no remains of
_boisei _or even of _Australopithicus africanus _and _Homo habilus
_(two species of advanced hominids believed to be our ancestors) have
been found in the Lower Nile Valley, but if human-like creatures were
already roaming over Africa nearly two million years ago, it seems
very likely they could have migrated to the Nile Valley. Many
archaeologists now believe, based on what has already been found at
Olduvai and similar sites, that it is only a matter of time before
remains of early hominids are found in Egypt. There is a strong case
for this, but until the discovery of australopithicine remains there,
the evidence is still only circumstantial.

For nomadic tribes of hunter-gatherers, as some anthropologists
believe our ancestors were, the fertile Nile Valley, with its readily
available water, game, and arable land, must have looked inviting
indeed. Additionally, this period is believed to have been much more
temperate and rainy than the Nile Valley of today, and so one must
imagine this area to be filled with wide expanses of grasslands,
teeming with life, similar to the savannas of southern and eastern
Africa. These savannas may even have extended well into what is today
the Sahara Desert, and oases such as the Karga Oasis and the Dungul
Oasis are all that is left of these vast ranges of vegetation. The
Nile may even have served as a migration route for early civilizations
to make their way up through Africa and into Europe, beginning the
spreading of the human race throughout the world.

At the very least, we can say early humans were in Egypt 700,000 years
ago for certain. To date, the oldest tools found in the lower Nile
Valley have been found in and near the cliffs of Abu Simbel, just
across the river from where, millennia later, the descendants of these
people would build the temple of Rameses II. Geological evidence
indicates they are around 700,000 years old, giving a fairly good
estimate as to when a Stone Age people was living in the area.
"Slightly" later, dating to approximately 500,000 years ago, are
various finds of stone tools, including the stone axes that the Lower
Paleolithic is noted for. Gertrude Caton-Thompson and Elinor Gardner
report industry in the Achulean Period (c. 250,000 - 90,000 BC) of the
Lower and Middle Paleolithic. Paleolithic sites are most often found
near dried-up springs or lakes, or in areas where materials to make
stone tools are plentiful.

One of the most important finds from the Achulean Period is known as
Arkin 8, discovered by Polish archaeologist Waldemar Chmielewski near
the the Nile Valley town of Wadi Halfa. Arkin 8, unlike many
Paleolithic sites in Egypt, was not only remarkably well-preserved,
but astonishingly rich. Arkin 8 boasts the earliest known house-like
structures in Egypt and the Sudan, some of the oldest buildings in the
world. The structures are oval depressions around 30 cm deep and 1.8 x
1.2 meters across, many lined with flat sandstone slabs. Most likely
these are what are known as "tent rings," in which a dome-like shelter
of skins or brush was held down by heavy rocks lain in a circle. This
type of dwelling provides a permanent place to live, but if necessary,
can be taken down easily and moved. They are the dwelling that seems
to be most favored by nomadic tribes making the transition from
hunter-gatherer to semi-permanent settlement and similar structures
are still built by modern hunter-gatherer tribes all over the world.
Another striking detail of the Arkin 8 site is the concentration of
artifacts in small areas of the "village," implying that these were
areas where groups of people gathered to work on stone artifacts
together. Arkin 8 paints a vivid picture of emerging human society.

Another important site is the site labeled BS-14, in the Libyan
Desert's Bir Sahara depression. Today this area is dry and parched,
but during the Achulean Period it was nourished by the frequent
rainfall. As was mentioned before, Egypt and the surrounding area of
this period was subject to much more rainfall than it is now. The
Abbassia [3]Pluvial prevailed during the late Achulean Period, lasting
around 30,000 years. During this time, according to the artifacts and
remains found at BS-14, the hunter-gatherer culture became more
stationary around the permanent water holes. Women, children, and
young men browsed for the bulk of the tribe's food near the water
hole, while the older men would go out and hunt on the grasslands.
[4][unhome.jpg] 

_Return to _[5]History_ | _[6]Egypt Home Page

Design, Layout and Graphic Art by [7]Jimmy Dunn, Text by [8]David C.
Scott; both [9]InterCity Oz, Inc. Employees.
All content, Graphic Art, Design, Layout, and Scripting Code Copyright
1997 by InterCity Oz, Inc.

References

1. http://interoz.com/egypt/datenote.htm
2. http://interoz.com/egypt/industry.htm
3. http://interoz.com/egypt/pluvial.htm
4. http://interoz.com/
5. http://interoz.com/egypt/ehistory.htm
6. http://interoz.com/egypt/index.htm
7. mailto:jimdunn at interoz.com
8. mailto:daves at interoz.com
9. http://interoz.com/