Skip to main content

Part of the book series: Environmental Science and Technology Library ((ENST,volume 10))

Abstract

Man has extracted raw material and energy from woodlands and forests since the beginning of mankind, but the real manipulation of the environment began when man started to clear forests for cultivation and for cattle at least 4,000 years ago. Since then, man has spread to almost every ecotone, utilizing different methods of cultivation and grazing strategies. Population increases have forced societies to create new economical and technological innovations to increase production; migrations along different scales have also occurred. These activities have affected the environment through soil degradation, which in many marginal areas leads to desertification as a consequence. Deforestation has occurred especially in the restricted montane forest areas in East Africa, in the margins of the tropical forest zone, and in the sparse woodlands of south central Africa. In addition, the intensification of iron production contributed to the loss of trees. This development has been demonstrated by archaeological and palynogical investigations. In the article, a few case studies from various parts of tropical Africa are presented to show how natural long-term climatological and geological factors and human land use practices lead to a loss of trees and deforestation, soil erosion, and formation of wastelands.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this chapter

Chapter
USD 29.95
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
eBook
USD 129.00
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book
USD 169.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
Hardcover Book
USD 169.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Purchases are for personal use only

Institutional subscriptions

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

References

  • Andah, B. 1987. Agricultural beginnings and early farming communities in West and Central Africa. West African Journal of Archaeology 17.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • de Barros, P. 1988. Societal repercussions of the rise of large-scale traditional iron production: a West African example. The African Archaeological Journal 6.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Brookes, I. 1994. Geomorphology and Quaternary geology of the Dakhla Oasis region, Egypt. Quaternary Science Review 12.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Butzer, K. 1981. Rise and fall of Axum, Ethiopia: a geo-archaeological interpretation. American Antiquity 46(3).

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Caldwell, J. & Caldwell, P. 1990. High fertility in Sub-Saharan Africa. Scientific American, May 1990.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Chittick, N. 1974. Excavations in Axum: a preliminary report. Azania 9.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Clist, B. 1987. Archaeology in Gabon, 1886ā€“1988. The African Archaeological Review 7.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Connah, G. 1987. African civilizations. Precolonial cities and states in tropical Africa: an archaeological perspective. Cambridge.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • David, N., Heimann, R., Killick, D. & Wayman, M. 1989. Between bloomery and blast furnace: Mafa iron-smelting technology in North Cameroon. The African Archaeological Review 7.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Denbow, J. 1990. Congo to Kalahari: data and hypotheses about the political economy of the western stream of the Early Iron Age. The African Archaeological Review 8.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Eggert, M. 1984. Inbonga und Lingonda: zur fruhesten Besiedlung des zentralafrikanischen Regenwaldes. Beitrage zur allgemeinen und vergleichenden ArchƤologie 6.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Ehret, C. 1993. Nilo-Saharnas and the Saharo-Sudanese Neolithic. In: Shaw, C, Sinclair, P., Andah, B. & Okpoko, A. (eds.). Archaeology of Africa: Foods, Metals and Towns. London.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Fage, J. D. 1969. A history of West Africa. Cambridge.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Gabriel, B. 1987. Palaeoecological evidence from neolithic fireplaces in the Sahara. The African Archaeological Review 7.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Gasse, F., Rognon, R. & Street, F. 1980. Quaternary history of the Afar and Ethiopian Rift In: Williams, M.A.J. & Faure, H. (eds.). The Sahara and the Nile. Rotterdam.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Grove, A.T. 1993. Africaā€™s climate in the Holocene. In: Shaw, C, Sinclair, P., Andah, B. & Okpoko, A. (eds.). The archaeology of Africa: foods, metals and towns. London.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Haaland, R. 1985. Iron production, its socio-cultural context and ecological impliations. In: Haaland, R. & Shinnie, P. (eds.). African iron working ā€” ancient and traditional. Bergen.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Haaland, R. & Shinnie, P. (eds.) 1985. African iron working ā€” ancient and traditional. Bergen.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Hamilton, A. 1982. Environmental history of east Africa. A Study of the Quaternary. London.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Harrison, P. 1987. The greening of Africa. Breaking through in the Battle for land and food. Glasgow.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Huffman, T. 1989. Ceramics, settlements and late Iron Age migrations. The African Archaeological Review 7.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Kuru, A. 1986. Soil erosion and strategic state policy: the case of Ethiopia. Publication of the Department of Environmental Conservation at the University of Helsinki No. 7. Helsinki.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Laulumaa, V. 1992. Expansion of swidden cultivation in Sub-Saharan Africa. A process in the light of two easy studies. MA Thesis, ms. in the Department of Archaeology, University of Helsinki.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Livingstone, D. 1967. Postglacial Vegetation of the Ruwenzori Mountains in Equatorial Africa. Ecological Monographs 37.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Mcintosh, S. 1994. Changing perceptions of West Africaā€™s past: archaeological research since 1988. Journal of Archaeological Research 2(2).

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Muriuki, G. 1975. A History of the Kikuyu 1500ā€“1900. Nairobi.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Neumann, K. 1989. Holocene vegetation of the Eastern Sahara: charcoal from prehistoric sites. The African Archaeological Review 7.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • van Noten, F. 1985. Ancient and modern iron smelting in Central Africa: Zaire, Rwanda and Burundi. In: Haaland, R. & Shinnie, P. (eds.). African iron working ā€” ancient and traditional. Bergen.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • OCF 1987. Our common future. The World Commission on Environment and Development. Oxford.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Oliver, R. 1977. The East African interior. In: Oliver, R. (ed.). The Cambridge History of Africa, Vol. 3. Cambridge.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Pankhurst, R. 1989. The history of famine in Ethiopia. In: Lemma, A. & Malaska, P. (eds.). Africa beyond Famine. A report to the Club of Rome. Rotterdam.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Petit-Maire, N. 1991. Recent Quaternary climatic change and man in the Sahara. Journal of African Earth Sciences 12(1/2).

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Phillipson, D. 1977. The later prehistory of eastern and southern Africa. New York.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Phillipson, D. 1985. African Archaeology. Cambridge.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Robertshaw, P. & SiiriƤinen, A. 1985: Excavations in Lakes Province, southern Sudan. Azania 20.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Routledge, W.S. & Routledge, K. 1910: With a pre-historic people. The Akikuyu of British East Africa. London.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Schoenbrun, D. 1993. Cattle heards and banana gardens: the historical geography of the western Great Lakes region, ca. AD 800ā€“1500. The African Archaeological Review 11.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Shinnie, P. 1978. The Nilotic Sudan and Ethiopia. In: Fage, J. (ed.). Cambridge History of Africa, Vol. II. Cambridge.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Shinnie, P. 1985. Iron working at Meroe. In: Haaland, R. & Shinnie, P. (eds.). African Iron Working; ancient and traditional. Bergen.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • SiiriƤinen, A. 1971. The iron age site at Gatungā€™angā€™a, central Kenya: contributions to the Gumba problem. Azania 6.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • SiiriƤinen, A. 1987. Manā€™s role in the ecological processes in Africa; towards a long-term historical model. In: Palo, M. & Salmi, J. (eds.). Deforestation or development in the third world? Vol. I. MetsƤntutkimuslaitoksen tiedonantoja 272: 15ā€“51. (Research Papers of the Finnish Forest Research Institute). Helsinki. Also published in: Lemma, A. & Malaska, P. (eds.). Africa beyond famine. A report to the Club of Rome. Rotterdam 1989.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Sinclair, P. 1987. Space, time and social formation. A territorial approach to the archaeology and anthropology of Zimbabwe and Mozambique ca. AD 0ā€“1700 Aun 9. Uppsala.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Sowumi, G. 1981. Aspects of Late Quaternary vegetation changes in West Africa. Journal of Biogeography 8.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Stahl, A. 1994: Innovation, diffusion, and culture contact: the Holocene archaeology of Ghana. Journal of World Prehistory 8(1).

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Sutton, J. 1974. The aqualithic civilization of middle Africa. The Journal of African History 15.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Sutton, J. 1989 (ed.). Towards a history of cultivating the fields (in Africa). Azania 24.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Vogel, J. 1986. Microenvironments, swidden and the Early Iron Age settlement of southwestern Zambia. Azania 21.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • Vogel, J. 1989. Savanna farmers on the Sandveldt: patterns of land-use and organisational behavior of some shifting cultivators in south-central Africa. Azania 24.

    Google ScholarĀ 

  • White, F. 1983. The vegetation of Africa. A descriptive memoir to accompany the Unesco /AETFAT/ UNSO vegetation map of Africa (Natural Resources Research XX). Unesco.

    Google ScholarĀ 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Editor information

Editors and Affiliations

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

Copyright information

Ā© 1996 Kluwer Academic Publishers

About this chapter

Cite this chapter

SiiriƤinen, A. (1996). Man and Forest in African History. In: Palo, M., Mery, G. (eds) Sustainable Forestry Challenges for Developing Countries. Environmental Science and Technology Library, vol 10. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1588-6_17

Download citation

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1588-6_17

  • Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht

  • Print ISBN: 978-94-010-7211-3

  • Online ISBN: 978-94-009-1588-6

  • eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive

Publish with us

Policies and ethics