東アフリカ初期牧畜民は家畜導入後も千年近く採集と漁労を継続(Some early herders didn’t quit fishing and foraging for a millennium after first keeping livestock)

2026-05-18 カナダ・ブリティッシュコロンビア大学(UBC)

カナダのブリティッシュコロンビア大学などの研究チームは、初期の牧畜民が家畜飼育を始めた後も、約1000年間にわたり漁労や採集を継続していたことを明らかにした。研究対象はモンゴル高原の古代集団で、動物骨や人骨の同位体分析を通じ、食生活と生業の変化を調査した。その結果、牧畜の導入後も人々は魚類や野生植物を重要な食料源として利用し続け、狩猟採集から牧畜へ急速に全面移行したわけではないことが判明した。研究者らは、従来の「牧畜革命」的な理解を修正し、環境条件や資源利用の柔軟性に応じた複合的生業体系が長期間維持されていたと指摘している。この成果は、人類社会の適応戦略や遊牧文化形成を再評価する重要な知見とされる。

東アフリカ初期牧畜民は家畜導入後も千年近く採集と漁労を継続(Some early herders didn’t quit fishing and foraging for a millennium after first keeping livestock)
Domestic cattle in the Turkana region, Kenya Credit: Katherine Grillo

<関連情報>

東アフリカ初期の牧畜民における食生活の多様性を示す同位体分析による証拠 Isotopic evidence for dietary variability among eastern Africa’s first pastoralists

Kendra L. Chritz, Elizabeth A. Sawchuk, Mary E. Prendergast, +14 , and Elisabeth A. Hildebrand
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:May 18, 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2532741123

Significance

Isotopic studies of human remains can track changes in dietary variation across transitions from wild food procurement to food production. In Kenya and Tanzania, foragers and fishers of the African Humid Period had highly varied approaches to subsistence, both within and between archaeological sites. The region’s first herders—pastoralists buried in communal cemeteries around Lake Turkana c. 5000 years ago—had similarly varied individual diets. More specialized approaches to herding appeared in central Kenya and northern Tanzania >1,000 years later. This study shows an extended period between initial use of domestic livestock and the development of more specialized pastoralist economies in eastern Africa.

Abstract

During the terminal Pleistocene through Holocene, changes in dietary diversity signaled fundamental shifts in the way humans related to food resources in many parts of the globe. To understand local and regional dietary variation across the transition to food production in Kenya and Tanzania, we compare isotopic values of biological tissues (tooth enamel and bone collagen) from 111 ancient foragers and herders dated ~9,500–230 B.P., alongside isotopic data from contemporary eastern Africans, and contextualize these findings with ancient leaf wax and ceramic lipid residues. Fisher-foragers had remarkably diverse approaches to subsistence, and the earliest pastoralists in Kenya’s Turkana Basin ~5,000 years ago retained dietary diversity amid major environmental and cultural changes. The shift to more specialized pastoralist diets did not occur until a millennium after the initial introduction of livestock.

1200農業一般
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