V. Linseele, E. Marinova, W. Van Neer, and P.M. Vermeersch (2010)
Sites with Holocene dung deposits in the Eastern Desert of Egypt: visited by herders?
Journal of Arid Environments, 74:818-828.
The Tree Shelter and Sodmein Cave are two sites in the Egyptian Eastern Desert with stratified
archaeological deposits. In Middle Holocene contexts of both sites, dated to the 7th millennium BP and
later, animal dung has been found, in the shape of small concentrations of pellets at the Tree Shelter and
of large accumulations at Sodmein Cave. The combination of several lines of evidence, including the size
and weight of the excrements, the dimensions of the dung layers from Sodmein and the presence of
hearths and artefacts inside them, and the species represented in the bone assemblages from Sodmein
and the Tree Shelter, indicates that the dung was mostly deposited by herds of domestic ovicaprines.
Sodmein Cave and the Tree Shelter belong to the oldest sites of the African continent where evidence for
domestic small livestock has been attested. The importance and size of the herds seems to have been
greater than would be suspected from the scant bone remains that were found. The visits to the caves
were probably short but repeated over a long time period. Macrobotanical remains recovered from the
dung suggest that these visits took place after seasonal winter rains.
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