Final Report Summary - TRANS-SAHARA (Trans-SAHARA: State Formation, Migration and Trade in the Central Sahara (1000 BC - AD 1500))
A second case study area, the Wadi Draa in southern Morocco, was investigated with a similar combination of remote sensing and field survey. Here again we have identified hundreds of previously unknown settlement sites and thousands of pre-Islamic burial monuments in extensive funerary zones alongside the modern oasis. Some of the hillfort settlements have yielded evidence of early first millennium AD cereal cultivation and metallurgy, demonstrating clear similarities with the early phases of Garamantian oasis civilisation. Among the impressive funerary monuments of the region we have identified a type of tomb with painted funerary chapel, which promise to illuminate further the nature of this desert society.
A more wide-ranging Saharan survey of oasis development and protohistoric funerary structures carried out as part of the project shows that these case studies are not exceptional instances, but rather representative of a more general spread of oasis agriculture, trade and advanced technologies, like metallurgy and underground irrigation channels (foggaras).
These results change the paradigms of Saharan archaeology of the historical eras.