Lord Zentei wrote:Looks like it to me...
It's not particularly PC, but genetic mutations give rise to mental as well as physical differences. I just don't like throwing the idea out. Nearly every major L3 subgroup had -some- notable civilization to their name. Then the Bantu discovered agriculture and conquered most of subtropical Africa in no time.
There is the Kingdom of Benin and Munhumutapa, the former of which claims descendancy from Egypt (doubtful, but Benisu -> Benin?). Great Zimbabwe was certainly a Bantu civilization.
Our current genetic lineage is 70,000 years old. While stagnation tends to be the rule of the day for evolution, it brings to mind why it took subsaharan Africans 66,000 years to come up with agriculture, Europeans 40,000, and so on. I find it harder to believe that the potential for agriculture in Africa only popped up 4,000 years ago instead of suffering through millenia of stagnation because the needs and benefits of such are less obvious / more difficult / whatever reason. But there is a reason.
What is it with these guys who have cigarette advertisements in their avatars?
It's to tell the geeks from the non-geeks. Don't worry, it just means you're not a geek.
GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:Language with formal writing likely evolved from a need to accurately track inventories, events, and other things important to a sophisticated civilization. (i.e. the information storage, information transfer, and information processing requirements exceeded the ability of tribal mechanisms (read: oral traditions and the memories of tribal elders) to cope.) However, in order to have a system of writing, you have to first develop a sustained non-nomadic civilization, which was difficult to do in that part of Africa for reasons already listed earlier in the thread.
AFIAK they were absent from the Kingdom of Benin, Great Zimbabwe and other large African civilizations that arose sometime around the 10th-12th centuries of the Christian era. Though, I suppose we have a much firmer picture of the development of Benin and Great Zimbabwe than the people of Egypt, the Indus Valley, or Sumer, and it's not really fair to make such a comparison.