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Medieval Zanzibar’s environment damaged by urban growth, study finds

Humanity’s impact on the environment is often framed in the context of the post-industrial era but new archaeological research reveals how intensive land use by a medieval East African population altered their natural habitat forever.

Unguja Ukuu, an archaeological settlement located on the Zanzibar Archipelago in Tanzania, was a key port of trade in the Indian Ocean by the first millennium when the island was populated by farming societies establishing trade links toward the Indian Ocean, China and beyond.

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New research published in the Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology describes how human activities modified the shoreline at Unguja Ukuu.

Urban growth at the coastal settlements and trade ports on the island, and associated trade, activities may have silted up the lagoon hindering the sea traffic and ultimately impacted fish numbers and played part in the community’s decline.

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Map of Zanzibar – image courtesy Dr Ania Kotarba–Morley, Flinders University

For millennia, the Indian Ocean was the maritime setting for a budding form of globalization, with extensive trade and exchange networks operating between eastern Africa, Southern Arabia, and Southeast Asia which foreshadowed modern global shipping networks.

“The islands of the Zanzibar Archipelago witnessed numerous environmental and cultural changes as the region became a hub of maritime trade, cross-cultural interaction, and global exchange,” says Dr Ania Kotarba–Morley, the study’s lead author and Senior Lecturer in Archaeology at Flinders University.

These changes resulted in the dumping of food remains, general waste and increased agricultural activity and land use, all of which negatively impacted sediment build up along the island.

(A) Composite photos of Menai Bay facing south-west from the beach; (B) Menai Beach from the intertidal zone, facing northeast toward the location of Trench UU14; and (C) fishing vessels beached and at anchor in Menai Bay at low tide, facing south-west toward Niamembe and Miwi Islands. Photos courtesy Dr Ania Kotarba – Morley, Flinders University

“Whilst discussion about human impacts on the planet and its natural environments is ever present in our current discourse, they almost always refer to the modern impacts and are focused on agricultural or urban areas such as large cities,” adds Mike Morley, Associate Professor at Flinders University. “Our study outlines clearly how human interference in a natural environment impacted coastal landforms and sediments on a remote East African island already over 1000 years ago and directly changed the fortunes of the coastal inhabitants in the area as a result.”

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The archaeologists applied a variety of standard and cutting-edge techniques to find new patterns which improve our understanding about the changes in the makeup of the sediment along the coastline of local creeks and the bay on the island, directly impacted by human activity.

Dr Kotarba-Morley explains, “To help understand how and why these ancient ports thrived or declined, it is important to know how the coastal landscape influenced the way traders undertook their commercial activities, or drove decisions, including mooring locations and investments of labour and capital by local communities and any central authorities. From an environmental standpoint, it is crucial to know whether this commercialization had a physical effect on the coastline, anthropogenically modifying the landscape morphology or causing change.”

The researchers say these processes might be implicated in the decline, and eventual abandonment of Unguja Ukuu at the turn of the second millennium AD—a period of regional socio-political and economic transformation of coastal African societies that marked the emergence of maritime Swahili culture.

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The article, “Coastal landscape changes at Unguja Ukuu, Zanzibar: Contextualizing the archaeology of an early Islamic port of trade,” by Ania M. Kotarba-Morley, Nikos Kourampas, Mike W. Morley, Conor MacAdams, Alison Crowther, Patrick Faulkner, Mark Horton and Nicole Boivin, is published in the Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology. Click here to access the article from Taylor and Francis Online.

See also: At Unguja Ukuu, human activity transformed the coast of Zanzibar more than 1,000 years ago

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