The fauna from Ratho Kroonkop, a rain-control site in the Shashe-Limpopo Confluence Area, Limpopo Province, South Africa

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Kathryn Croll University of the Witwatersrand/University of Pretoria
Shaw Badenhorst Evolutionary Studies Institute, University of the Witwatersrand
Jerome Reynard University of the Witwatersrand image/svg+xml
Alex Schoeman University of the Witwatersrand image/svg+xml

Keywords

Faunal analysis, Shashe-Limpopo Confluence Area, Rain-control, Middle Iron Age

Abstract

Rain-control in the Shashe-Limpopo Confluence Area (SLCA) is one sphere in which hunter-gatherer and farmer interaction is archaeologically visible. One avenue of examining this interaction is through faunal analysis. This paper presents an updated taxa list for one of the identified rain-control sites in the SLCA – Ratho Kroonkop. By identifying the taxa accumulated at Ratho Kroonkop and contextualising them using radiocarbon dates and relevant ethnographies, we were able to determine that particular animals were significant to the people who utilised the location as a rain-control site. Additionally, we were able to establish that this significance continued from the K2 period (AD 1000-1220) to the historic period.

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