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People buried at Gishimangeda Cave near Lake Eyasi (pictured) in Tanzania provided evidence of later herders’ more specialized diets.
Photo Credit Mary Prendergast
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Early Pastoralist Dietary Diversity
The Core Concept: Analysis of ancient remains reveals that the earliest livestock herders in eastern Africa did not immediately adopt a specialized pastoral diet but maintained highly diverse, individualized diets consisting of fish, wild game, and foraged plants alongside domesticated animals for over a millennium.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Instead of relying solely on domesticated cattle, sheep, and goats, early pastoralists utilized a mixed-subsistence strategy to mitigate the risks of climate instability. Researchers identified this by analyzing stable isotopes in ancient human teeth—which provide a long-term dietary record—coupled with the extraction of fatty residues preserved in ancient ceramic cooking pots.
Origin/History: This dietary flexibility was observed in early herding populations living around Lake Turkana approximately 5,000 years ago. The broader study analyzed human remains in Kenya and Tanzania spanning a timeline from 9,500 to 200 years ago, highlighting a delayed transition to a purely livestock-centered diet.









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