Esh-Shaheinab: The archetype of the Sudanese Neolithic, its premises and sequels

PLoS One. 2024 Oct 31;19(10):e0309600. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0309600. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Esh-Shaheinab is a landmark in the African Neolithic. This site gave the name Shaheinab Neolithic to the Neolithic period in central Sudan, becoming its archetype. Excavated in the late 1940s by A.J. Arkell, it bears witness to the processes of domestic animal introduction from the Middle East into North and East Africa. Its excavation also uncovered the remains of an earlier Mesolithic or Early Khartoum (ca. ninth-sixth millennia BC) and a Late Neolithic occupation (ca. fourth millennium BC), providing essential insights into the Neolithic's premises and sequels. Although the influence of Esh-Shaheinab has been recognized for more than seventy years, our knowledge of its material culture has remained as it was then. In 2001, one of the present authors (EAAG) had permission to restudy the ceramic collection at the National Museum in Khartoum and subsequently export samples for laboratory analyses. Here, for the first time, we provide a multi-scale analysis of the Esh-Shaheinab ceramic material from the Early Khartoum to the Late Neolithic periods by integrating the chaîne opératoire approach into the local landscape. By combining the results of macroscopic and microscopic analyses, we performed petrographic investigations on the composition and manufacturing technology of the ceramic pastes using polarized optical microscopy (POM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM-EDS). Organic residue analysis (ORA) was also carried out, to provide information on diet, vessel use, and subsistence practices. The results of our combined analyses showed that the inhabitants of Esh-Shaheinab developed an adaptation specific to the ecological niche they inhabited. They lived in the western valley of the Nile, which was narrower and offered different environmental conditions than the eastern bank. This resulted in partial continuity in manufacturing traditions and ceramic recipes, including more mixed wadi materials and a strong emphasis on wild meat consumption as the narrower alluvial plain restricted animal herding.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Archaeology*
  • Ceramics / chemistry
  • Ceramics / history
  • History, Ancient
  • Humans
  • Sudan

Grants and funding

This article was written within the framework of the project “The emergence of pottery in the Middle Nile Valley (Sudan),” for which GDE received funds from the Bavarian Gender Equality Grant (BGF) of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU), Germany in 2019-2020. The petrographic (POM) analyses were co-funded by the BGF and the Department of Letters and Philosophy of the University of Cassino and Southern Latium, Italy. The SEM/EDS analyses were funded to GDE respectively by the LMU Mentoring program and by the LMU Postdoc Support Fund 2021. The authors also wish to thank the NERC for partial funding of the National Environmental Isotope Facility (NEIF; contract no. NE/V003917/1) and NERC (contract no. NE/V003917/1) and funding from the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007-2013) and European Research Council Grant Agreement number 340923 for funding GC-MS capabilities, together with NERC (contract no. NE/V003917/1) and the University of Bristol for funding the GC-IRMS capabilities. The publication costs were covered by the LMU Mentoring program of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany.