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Portrait reconstruction of A man buried in Malawi in the Bronze Age era
Ancient Individual

A man buried in Malawi in the Bronze Age era

A man buried in Malawi during the Hora Late Stone Age 8500BP in Malawi

A fragment of the ancient world, preserved across millennia in strands of DNA.

I2966
7131 BCE - 6775 BCE
Male
Malawi
Scroll to begin
Chapter I

Identity

The biological and cultural markers that define this ancient individual

Sample ID

I2966

Date Range

7131 BCE - 6775 BCE

Cultural Period

Hora Late Stone Age 8500BP in Malawi

Biological Sex

Male

mtDNA Haplogroup

L0k2

Y-DNA Haplogroup

BT

Chapter II

Place

Where this individual was discovered

Country Malawi
Locality Mzimba District. Hora
Chapter III

Time

When this individual lived in the broader context of human history

I2966 7131 BCE - 6775 BCE
Chapter IV

Story

The narrative of this ancient life

The Hora Late Stone Age period, around 8500 BP (Before Present), marks a significant phase in the prehistory of Malawi and broader regions of sub-Saharan Africa. This era is situated within the latter part of the Stone Age, a time characterized by advanced stone tool technologies and the gradual shift towards more sophisticated forms of gathering and hunting societies.

Environmental and Climatic Context

During this period, the world was emerging from the last Ice Age, and for Malawi and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa, this meant a relatively stable and warmer climate compared to the frigid conditions of the preceding millennia. This climatic stability influenced the environmental landscape, leading to the expansion of savannahs, woodlands, and water bodies. Such conditions provided a more hospitable environment for human habitation, offering abundant resources such as game, plant materials, and raw materials for tool-making.

Technological Developments

The Hora Late Stone Age is marked by advancements in lithic technologies, derived from earlier Middle Stone Age methods but refined over time. Toolkits from this era typically include microliths—small, often retouched stone blades that could be hafted or used independently. These tools suggest an adaptation to the varied environments, used for hunting, processing plant materials, and possibly fishing, as evidenced by archaeological finds from sites across the region.

Subsistence Strategies

Communities of this era were predominantly foragers, employing a mixed strategy of hunting and gathering. The savanna and woodland ecosystems would have supported a diverse range of fauna, from smaller game like antelope to elephants, as well as a rich variety of edible plants. The presence of microliths and grinding stones in the archaeological record indicates a reliance on both hunting and plant processing, pointing to a broad-spectrum subsistence strategy.

Social and Cultural Aspects

The social structures of the Hora Late Stone Age people, while not well-documented due to the scarcity of direct evidence, can be inferred from ethnographic analogies with more recent hunter-gatherer societies. These groups likely operated in small, mobile bands, with social organization based on kinship ties. Mobility would have been a key factor in their survival strategy, allowing groups to follow seasonal patterns of resource availability.

Cultural aspects are primarily understood through material culture. Artifacts such as ostrich eggshell beads and other personal adornments suggest a level of social complexity and the importance of identity and status within these communities. Such items could also have played a role in trade and exchange networks, fostering connections between different groups across the region.

Symbolism and Art

There is limited direct evidence of symbolic behavior from this period in Malawi itself, but parallels can be drawn with contemporaneous cultures elsewhere in Africa. It is likely that these communities engaged in symbolic practices, potentially including rock art, body painting, or other forms of material expression. Unfortunately, organic materials that might have borne such symbolism rarely survive the archaeological record, necessitating cautious interpretation.

Conclusion

The Hora Late Stone Age around 8500 BP in Malawi represents a dynamic period of adaptation and innovation. As the climate became more favorable, human groups effectively exploited the resources available, using advanced stone tools and versatile subsistence strategies. While direct evidence of their beliefs and social organization remains elusive, the artifact record paints a picture of a culturally rich and resourceful society, laying down foundations for future developments in Africa's human story.

Context

Related Samples

This individual exists within a broader network of ancient samples. No ancient genome stands alone.

Sample ID Culture/Period Date Location Action
I2966 Hora Late Stone Age 8500BP in Malawi 7131 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I0589 Zanzibar 1300 Years Before Present in Tanzania 586 CE Zanzibar. Kuumbi Cave, Tanzania View
I3726 Luxmanda 3000 Years Before Present in Tanzania 1204 BCE Luxmanda. UVS40, Tanzania View
KhoesanLeipzigHunter South Africa 2200 Years Before Present 403 BCE St. Helena, South Africa View
MAL-005 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Dedza // Yao, Malawi View
MAL-009 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Machinga // Yao, Malawi View
MAL-011 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mchinga // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-012 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Salima // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-014 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Nambuma // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-015 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Blantyre // Yao, Malawi View
MAL-018 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Nkotankhota // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-019 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Dedza // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-023 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mchisi // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-024 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mangochi // Yao, Malawi View
MAL-025 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Chev // Ngoni, Malawi View
MAL-026 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Chev // Ngoni, Malawi View
MAL-028 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Lilongwe // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-032 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Blantyre // Yao, Malawi View
MAL-043 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Chev // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-045 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Dowa // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-047 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Majimba // Tumbuka, Malawi View
MAL-050 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Zomba // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-058 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mzimba // Tumbuka, Malawi View
MAL-059 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mzimba // Tumbuka, Malawi View
MAL-065 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mzimba // Tumbuka, Malawi View
MAL-073 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mzimba // Tumbuka, Malawi View
MAL-074 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mzimba // Ngoni, Malawi View
MAL-079 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Karonga // Tumbuka, Malawi View
MAL-097 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Nlekata bay //, Malawi View
MAL-099 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Karonga // Tumbuka, Malawi View
MAL-101 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Machinga // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-112 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mangochi // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-122 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Lilongwe // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-124 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Chev Distr // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-136 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mangochi // Yao, Malawi View
MAL-196 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Zomba // chiyao, Malawi View
MAL-197 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Majimba // Chichewa, Malawi View
MAL-206 Modern Malawi 2000 CE Mzimba // Tumbuka, Malawi View
I0595 Kenya 400 Years Ago 1445 BCE Kilifi. Panga ya Saidi, Kenya View
I4421 Chencherere Late Stone Age 5200BP in Malawi 3400 BCE Chencherere, Malawi View
I4422 Chencherere Late Stone Age 5200BP in Malawi 3351 BCE Chencherere, Malawi View
I4426 Fingira Late Stone Age 2500BP in Malawi 542 BCE Fingira, Malawi View
I4427 Late Stone Age Malawi 4227 BCE Fingira, Malawi View
I4468 Late Stone Age Malawi 4230 BCE Fingira, Malawi View
I2967 Hora Late Stone Age 8500BP in Malawi 6222 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
UCT473 South Africa 1200 Years Before Present 665 CE Kasteelberg, South Africa View
UCT386 South Africa 1900 Years Before Present 88 BCE Faraoskop Rock Shelter, South Africa View
I1048 Pemba 1400 Years Before Present in Tanzania 539 CE Zanzibar. Pemba Island. Mapangani Cave, Tanzania View
I2298 Pemba 600 Years Before Present in Tanzania 1319 CE Zanzibar. Pemba Island. Mapangani Cave, Tanzania View
UCT473 665 BCE Kasteelberg, South Africa View
UCT386 88 BCE Faraoskop Rock Shelter, South Africa View
I0589 586 BCE Zanzibar. Kuumbi Cave, Tanzania View
I1048 539 BCE Zanzibar. Pemba Island. Mapangani Cave, Tanzania View
I2298 1319 BCE Zanzibar. Pemba Island. Mapangani Cave, Tanzania View
I1048 539 BCE Zanzibar. Pemba Island. Mapangani Cave, Tanzania View
I0595 1445 BCE Kilifi. Panga ya Saidi, Kenya View
I0589 586 BCE Zanzibar. Kuumbi Cave, Tanzania View
I2966 7131 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I2966 7131 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I2967 6222 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I2967 6222 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I2967 6222 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I2967 6222 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I4468 4230 BCE Fingira, Malawi View
I4427 4227 BCE Fingira, Malawi View
I4421 3400 BCE Chencherere, Malawi View
I4422 3351 BCE Chencherere, Malawi View
I3726 1204 BCE Luxmanda. UVS40, Tanzania View
I1048 539 BCE Zanzibar. Pemba Island. Mapangani Cave, Tanzania View
I4426 542 BCE Fingira, Malawi View
Sample ID Culture/Period Date Location Action
I2966 Hora Late Stone Age 8500BP in Malawi 7131 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
I2967 Hora Late Stone Age 8500BP in Malawi 6222 BCE Mzimba District. Hora, Malawi View
Sources

References

Scientific publications and genetic data that inform this profile.

Scientific Publication

Reconstructing Prehistoric African Population Structure

Authors Skoglund P, Thompson JC, Prendergast ME, Mittnik A, Sirak K et al.
Abstract

We assembled genome-wide data from 16 prehistoric Africans. We show that the anciently divergent lineage that comprises the primary ancestry of the southern African San had a wider distribution in the past, contributing approximately two-thirds of the ancestry of Malawi hunter-gatherers ∼8,100-2,500 years ago and approximately one-third of the ancestry of Tanzanian hunter-gatherers ∼1,400 years ago. We document how the spread of farmers from western Africa involved complete replacement of local hunter-gatherers in some regions, and we track the spread of herders by showing that the population of a ∼3,100-year-old pastoralist from Tanzania contributed ancestry to people from northeastern to southern Africa, including a ∼1,200-year-old southern African pastoralist. The deepest diversifications of African lineages were complex, involving either repeated gene flow among geographically disparate groups or a lineage more deeply diverging than that of the San contributing more to some western African populations than to others. We finally leverage ancient genomes to document episodes of natural selection in southern African populations. PAPERCLIP.

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