Tira Shubart Off Mafia Island, Tanzania | |
These discoveries show the people here were interacting with other civilisations - and long before the Islamic era |
Prof. Felix Chami |
The professor had been alerted to the existence of the cave by two local men who informed Peter Byrne, owner of a small lodge on Mafia Island and supporter of efforts to discover the intriguing history of these small islands - which are now entirely dependent on fishing.
Cave spirits
We sailed on a dhow from Mafia Island to a beach on nearby Juani Island which Dr Chami believes may have been an ancient port since the Iron Age.
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The men hacked a path through the luxuriant growth with pangas which revealed a collapsed coral cave around 20 metres in diameter.
With the help of hanging vines we climbed down into the cave.
Major site
Scattered throughout the seven to 10-metre-high overhanging cave were shards of pottery, human bones and three skulls.
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"There could be three metres of layers here to establish a cultural chronology," he says.
"This is a marvel. I believe this was a major Iron Age site. I can assure you this will change the archaeology of East Africa."
Felix Chami will return to the site with his team after the rainy season to start a full excavation.
In the past five years Dr Chami has overturned the belief that Swahili civilisation was simply the result of Indian Ocean trade networks.
Trade secrets
"It was thought that Swahili settlements were founded by foreigners, particularly by Islamic traders," he says. "But these discoveries show the people here were interacting with other civilisations - and long before the Islamic era."
Dr Chami believes the coastal communities may have been trading animal goods, such as ivory as well as iron.
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It was there on the hills above the river that Dr Chami found the remains of settlements with ancient trading goods and evidence of agriculture.
Directly opposite the Rufiji delta are Mafia & Juani Islands.
Dr Chami's excavations uncovered cultural artefacts which have been carbon dated to 600 BC.
They included Greco-Roman pottery, Syrian glass vessels, Sassanian pottery from Persia and glass beads.
But Felix Chami believes the new site on Juani Island may well be the most significant yet.
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