Maritime East Africa (4,365–2,638 BCE) Late Neolithic/Chalcolithic…
4365 BCE to 2638 BCE
Maritime East Africa (4,365–2,638 BCE) Late Neolithic/Chalcolithic — Canoe Economies and Exchange Networks
Geographic and Environmental Context
Maritime East Africa includes littoral and nearshore islands from Somalia through Kenya and Tanzania to northern/central Mozambique and southern Malawi, plus Lamu–Pate–Mombasa, Zanzibar–Pemba–Mafia, Kilwa Kisiwani–Songo Mnara, the Comoros, Madagascar, Seychelles, and the Mascarene Islands.
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Anchors: Lamu archipelago, Mombasa–Kilifi, Zanzibar–Pemba–Mafia, Kilwa Kisiwani–Songo Mnara, Comoros (Ngazidja, Nzwani, Mwali), Madagascar highlands/coasts, Seychelles/Mascarene atolls.Sea level ~100 m lower, exposing broad Somali–Kenyan–Tanzanian shelves
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Coastal nodes matured: Mombasa, Zanzibar, Kilwa.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
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Monsoon reliable; cyclones episodic.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Farming spread into coast (millets); shellfish still important.
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Salt–dried fish became trade staples.
Technology & Material Culture
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Decorated pottery; copper ornaments traded in.
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Canoes standardized.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Regional canoe trade in salt, fish, beads; beginnings of long-haul exchange.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Ritual feasts at canoe gatherings.
Adaptation & Resilience
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Redundancy between crops and fisheries.
Transition
By 2,638 BCE, canoe economies tied coastal nodes into wider exchange webs.