Nabta Playa

region in the Nubian Desert

Nabta Playa was once a large basin in the Nubian Desert. It is about 500 miles south of modern-day Cairo[1] and about 100 kilometers west of Abu Simbel in southern Egypt,[2] 22° 32' north, 30° 42' east.[3] Many archaeological sites have been found there.[2]

The approximate location of Nabta Playa is circled in red.

Early history

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From around the 10th millennium BC, this area began to get more rainfall than before. Because of the extra rainwater, a lake formed.[2] Early people may have come here because there was water available. They could only graze their cattle where there was grass, and grass only grew next to water.

Archaeologists (scientists who find and study artifacts) say that the first people came to the region between the 10th and 8th millennia BC.[2] These peoples were growing domesticated cattle and using ceramic pottery.[2] The ceramics had complicated painted patterns on them. These patterns may have been made by using combs.[2]

By the 7th millennium BC, more developed settlements were in the area. They also used deep wells for water.[2] Huts are found built in straight rows.[2] People lived from fruit, legumes, millets, sorghum and tubers.[2] A little later in 7th millennium BC, there seem to have been more goats and sheep. These most likely came from Southwest Asia [1] Archived 2018-02-05 at the Wayback Machine . There were many large hearths.[2]

Archaeological findings show that these prehistoric peoples lived at a higher level of organization than those who came after them, who lived closer to the Nile Valley:[2]

Findings also show that the region was occupied only seasonally. People only lived there in the summer, when the lake filled with water for grazing cattle.[2][4] Analysis of human remains show that the people who lived here may have migrated from sub-Saharan Africa.[4]

Religious ties to ancient Egypt

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By the 6th millennium BC, there may have been a prehistoric religion or cult. Sacrificed cattle were found buried in stone-roofed chambers lined with clay.[2] This cattle cult in Nabta Playa may be related to Ancient Egypt's Hathor cult. An example of this connection may be that Hathor was worshiped as a nighttime protector in desert regions.

Though the religious practices of the region involving cattle show possible ties to Ancient Egypt,[2] Egyptologist Mark Lehner[1] says:

It makes sense, but not in a facile, direct way. You can't go straight from these megaliths to the pyramid of Djoser.

This means that though there is evidence, there is no direct proof showing that the cattle cult was connected to Hathor.

 
Circular megalith at Nabta

One of the world's earliest known examples of archeoastronomy

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By the 5th millennium BC these peoples had fashioned one of the world's earliest known astronomical devices (roughly contemporary to the Goseck circle in Germany), about 1000 years older than but comparable to Stonehenge.[2] It may have been a prehistoric calendar which accurately marks the summer solstice.[3]

The research done by the astrophysicist Thomas G. Brophy suggests that these monoliths might tell much more. The calendar circle itself is made up of one doorway that runs north-south, a second that runs northeast-southwest marking the summer solstice, and six center stones. Brophy's theory proposes first that three of the center stones match the belt of Orion at its minimum tilt and the other three match the shoulder and head stars of Orion at their maximum tilt. This cycle repeats approximately every 25,000 years, following the precession of the equinoxes. The last minimum of Orion's belt occurred between 6400 BC and 4900 BC, matching the radio-carbon dating of campfires around the circle.[5][6]

The stone circle at Nabta Playa is built precisely on what was then the Tropic of Cancer, the sun's farthest North point of travel that is, today, about 23 degrees 40 minutes N. Such a site would interest the wise men of the megalithic era and some would travel many days to erect such a site and then study there[source?].

Another stone megalithic structure exists which consists of a central radial stone and several other stones in the distance. In interpreting this Brophy found that the lines made to these stones from the radial stone match the spots in the sky where the various stars marked by the center stones in the calendar circle at the time they rose as the vernal equinox heliacal rising. In analyzing the varying distances, mulling through assumptions such as that they represented the brightness of the stars, he inadvertently found that they matched the distance of the stars from Earth on a scale of 1 meter = .799 light years within the margin of error for astronomical distances calculated today.[7][8]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Archaeological Institute of America". Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2008-03-14.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 "Comparative Archaeology Web". Archived from the original on 2010-10-09. Retrieved 2008-03-14.
  3. 3.0 3.1 NASA
  4. 4.0 4.1 "University of Texas". Archived from the original on 2009-05-03. Retrieved 2008-03-14.
  5. West, John Anthony. Magical Egypt: A Symbolist Tour Episode 3: Descent. Cydonia, 2002.
  6. Brophy, T.G. and Rosen, P.A. Satellite Imagery Measures of the Astronomically Aligned Megaliths at Nabta Playa, Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry 5(1) (2005) 15 - 24
  7. West, John Anthony. Magical Egypt: A Symbolist Tour Episode 3: Descent. Cydonia, 2002.
  8. Brophy, Thomas G. (2002). The Origin Map: Discovery of a Prehistoric, Megalithic, Astrophysical Map and Sculpture of the Universe. iUniverse. ISBN 0-595-24122-0.

References

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22°32′N 30°42′E / 22.533°N 30.700°E / 22.533; 30.700