Africa and Beyond
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Africa, the Middle East, Food, Agriculture, History and Culture
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Early pottery in China

Early pottery in China | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

A team of scientists led by Dr. Xiaohong Wu of Peking University has recently dated sediment layers containing pottery fragments in Xianrendong Cave in China and found them to be approximately 20,000 years old, predating the earliest known pottery dates by about 2,000 years, and predating the advent of agriculture by about 10,000 years. The finding refutes the long-held view that pottery production coincided with the beginning of agriculture.


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Invisible Animals: Incredible Examples of Animals Camouflage | The Wondrous Design Magazine

Invisible Animals: Incredible Examples of Animals Camouflage | The Wondrous Design Magazine | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
There are a lot of reasons that make animals hide. Some animals are trying to protect themselves from attacks of predators, while some are hiding
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Ten principles for a landscape approach to reconciling agriculture, conservation, and other competing land uses

“Landscape approaches” seek to provide tools and concepts for allocating and managing land to achieve social, economic, and environmental objectives in areas where agriculture, mining, and other productive land uses compete with environmental and biodiversity goals. Here we synthesize the current consensus on landscape approaches. This is based on published literature and a consensus-building process to define good practice and is validated by a survey of practitioners. We find the landscape approach has been refined in response to increasing societal concerns about environment and development tradeoffs. Notably, there has been a shift from conservation-orientated perspectives toward increasing integration of poverty alleviation goals. We provide 10 summary principles to support implementation of a landscape approach as it is currently interpreted. These principles emphasize adaptive management, stakeholder involvement, and multiple objectives. Various constraints are recognized, with institutional and governance concerns identified as the most severe obstacles to implementation. We discuss how these principles differ from more traditional sectoral and project-based approaches. Although no panacea, we see few alternatives that are likely to address landscape challenges more effectively than an approach circumscribed by the principles outlined here.

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DFID - Research for Development > LDPI Working Paper 19. Land Grabbing along Livestock Migration Routes in Gadarif State, Sudan: Impacts on Pastoralism and the Environment

"Grabbing of pastoralists’ traditional land to put it under the commercial farming system, which has widely been adopted as a development and investment strategy in Sudan, is creating a cruel dilemma of increasing both resource conflict and environmental degradation. This is one of the fundamental reasons that the country has earned the reputation as a home of bloody civil wars and the country is unlikely to see lasting peace until such issues have been addressed. My aim in this research is to provide evidence-based information by mapping out the encroachment of large-scale agriculture into transhumance migration routes in Gadarif State (eastern Sudan), with a two-fold approach. First, I tracked the land-use/land-cover (LULC) change using satellite imagery. Second, I interviewed transhumant pastoralists to obtain information about their perspectives on major problems facing them along the routes in their seasonal journey. It is clear that state policy has failed to provide support to pastoralists. Animal mobility in space and time are severely constrained. The average of the annual encroachment of mechanized farming along the routes is 3 percent. The most substantial LULC change occurred after 1999. Other challenges facing the routes are: lack of water resources, design of the routes and degradation of rest places. Due to the abolition of their native administrative system and lack of education, pastoralists have no way of influencing any decisions that impacted their system."
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Forests and food security: back on the global agenda

Forests and food security: back on the global agenda | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
Recent news headlines, a plethora of scientific publications and the creation of new academic think tanks all reflect growing concerns over how to achieve global food security --

Food production need not be solely based on intensive agriculture focused on a few, high-yielding crops.

Estimates show that 40 percent of the food in the developing world is produced by smallholder farmers, often in complex multi-functional landscapes, which depend on integrated crop management.

In addition, recent estimates from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) suggest that around 1.6 billion people rely on forests and other natural systems in some way for their diets, health and wider livelihoods.

Forests, and the wider landscapes in which they occur, potentially have a considerable role to play in the emerging strategies to achieve global food security.

Forests not only contribute to diverse and nutritious diets, particularly for the poorest members of society, but also sustain agriculture through the provision of critical ecosystem services such as pollination, soil stabilization and watershed protection.

However, recognition of the role of forests in food security is not new: 1985 was designated the year of Forests and Food Security and a special issue of the FAO journal, Unasylva was subsequently published.

The forests and food security agenda was gradually replaced by other pressing development concerns. Until recently, it was off the agenda altogether.

However, with “mainstream” food security issues coming to the fore, the role of forests in securing nutritional and food security is back in the frame.

This week, the FAO International Conference on Forests for Food Security and Nutritionin Rome will feature discussion on how we can ensure that sustainable food production can take place without compromising the wider environment.

We seem to have come full circle. Given the evidence, we should not be surprised that the issue of forests and food security is once again at the forefront of the international development agenda: the challenge will be to keep it there.

 

 

 

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Africa’s New Science and Innovation Agenda | Technology+Policy

Africa’s New Science and Innovation Agenda | Technology+Policy | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

The problem-oriented focus [of the meeting] was reinforced by Western Cape Premier Helen Zille, who noted that many South African scientists had won Nobel prizes in the sciences by focusing on solving practical problems in physics, chemistry, and medicine. African scientists have contributed to many other fields of scientific endeavor and are well positioned to do the same in the future, she said.


“But they must abandon the separation between basic and applied research and focus on finding solutions to contemporary problems,” she underscored.

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Climate research nearly unanimous on human causes, survey finds

Climate research nearly unanimous on human causes, survey finds | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

"Our findings prove that there is a strong scientific agreement about the cause of climate change, despite public perceptions to the contrary," said John Cook of the University of Queensland, who led the survey.

Public opinion continues to lag behind the science. Though a majority of Americans accept the climate is changing, just 42% believed human activity was the main driver, in a poll conducted by the Pew Research Centre last October.

"There is a gaping chasm between the actual consensus and the public perception," Cook said in a statement

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Pastoralism’s economic contributions are significant but overlooked

Pastoralism’s economic contributions are significant but overlooked | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
Experts say a ‘total economic valuation’ is needed to fully appreciate pastoralists’ contribution to national economies NAIROBI, 16 May 2013 (IRIN) - Pastoralism is often regarded as an antiquated ...
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Still today, gov'ts and advisors, etc, firmly believe that pastoralilsm is a preliminary stage before agriculture - a great deal of work remains to be done, to show how and why this is simply not the case.

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The History Blog » Blog Archive » 19th c. slave cabin donated to Smithsonian’s African American History Museum

The History Blog » Blog Archive » 19th c. slave cabin donated to Smithsonian’s African American History Museum | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

An antebellum slave cabin from the Point of Pines Plantation on Edisto Island, South Carolina, will become a centerpieceof the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture(NMAAHC), a new museum set to open in 2015. The cabin, one of two still standing on the plantation, was donated to the museum last month by theEdisto Island Historic Preservation Society who received it from the plantation’s owners, the Burnet Maybank family.


Another [document] is the 1758 estate inventory of Joshua Grimball (Paul Grimball, the first European settler of Edisto Island in 1674, built the plantation; it stayed in his family until it was sold to the Baileys in 1789).


Along with the furniture, tools, cattle, spinning wheels and glassware, it lists the names of more than 90 Point of Pines slaves, among them Wando Pompey, the Wench Murriah, Big Sampson, Angolo Ned, Sambo and Gamboa Sampson.


The African place names indicate first generation slaves

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Drill baby drill! The fate of African biodiversity and the monkey you've never heard of

Drill baby drill! The fate of African biodiversity and the monkey you've never heard of | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

Equatorial Guinea is not a country that stands very large in the American consciousness. In fact most Americans think you mean Papua New Guinea when you mention it or are simply baffled.

 

"The Bioko Island drills are one of the largest, rarest and least studied primates in the world. Other than captive individuals, little is known about the drills, their behavior and their ecology," Justin Jay of the Bioko Biodiversity Protection Program'sDrill Projecttold mongabay.com.

Indeed, only the very basics are known about the Bioko drill, which is a subspecies endemic to the island. Although drills are related to baboons and look very similar, they are more closely related to mandrills. Once thought to be baboons, the drill and mandrill now occupy their own genus Mandrillus.


About the mandrill Charles Darwin said in The Descent of Man, "no other member in the whole class of mammals is colored in so extraordinary a manner as the adult male mandrills".

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Gummy grin: colobus monkey born at ZSL London Zoo « Green Blogger

Gummy grin: colobus monkey born at ZSL London Zoo « Green Blogger | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

The Eastern Black and White Colobus species of Old World monkeys naturally reside in the forests of Africa, and eat mainly fruit, leaves, flowers, and twigs. Because of their herbivorous diet, they are important for seed dispersal from their sloppy eating habits and their digestive systems. These monkeys are vital creatures to Africa’s ecosystem, and unfortunately they are popular prey for Africa’s forest predators and are threatened by bushmeat trade from hunters, logging, and habitat destruction.

 
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National Geographic Traveler Magazine: 2013 Photo Contest

National Geographic Traveler Magazine: 2013 Photo Contest | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
The National Geographic Traveler Magazine photo contest, now in its 25th year, has begun. There is still plenty of time to enter. The entry deadline is Sunday, June 30, at 11:59 p.m.
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Les mines d’El Alamein

Les mines d’El Alamein | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
Egypte actus's curator insight, May 15, 6:43 AM
Les élèves de l'atelier radio du Lycée français du Caire racontent pourquoi il y a autant de mines en Egypte et spécialement à El Alamein.
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Ex-SVP pol spreads racial hatred - World Radio Switzerland

Ex-SVP pol spreads racial hatred
World Radio Switzerland
A former Swiss People's Party politician has been convicted of spreading racial hatred online.
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Dialing back on the drivers of global disease outbreaks: A look inside the ‘black box’ » ILRI news

Dialing back on the drivers of global disease outbreaks: A look inside the ‘black box’ » ILRI news | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

... the world is increasingly farming on the margins, with most of the last few remaining near-pristine ecosystems now being invaded and destabilized. Just as inexorable is the move to rapidly growing cities of poor rural people, who are bringing their livestock with them. The resulting losses of biodiversity, and the rise of genetically improved, and thus similar, animal populations, also increases the risk of a pandemic emerging. Climate and environmental changes are generally making matters worse.

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Forests and insects for food security

Forests and insects for food security | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation has recently brought attention to two neglected areas of food security: forests and insects. On the 13th to 15th May 2013 the FAO hosted an Inte...
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Forest foods should be used in fight against global malnutrition - scientist

Forest foods should be used in fight against global malnutrition - scientist | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

"Already 1.6 billion people rely on forests, which cover more than 30 percent of the world’s land surface, to eke out a livelihood, according to 2010 data from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The upcoming FAO International Conference on Forests for Food Security and Nutrition in Rome will explore the important role forests play in the lives of rural people and the global economy.

Such dietary sources contribute to food security as well, said Powell, pointing to a recent global study done by CIFOR. It found that forests-related income contributed about one-fifth of the total income of rural households across 24 countries — money that, if used wisely, could then used to buy nutritious foods.

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Scientists aim to pinpoint role of forests in battle against “hidden hunger”

Scientists aim to pinpoint role of forests in battle against “hidden hunger” | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

"The view that increased crop production is the strategy most likely to achieve global food security could in reality allow farmland to encroach on valuable ecosystems, have a disastrous impact on forests and might not solve food security and nutrition problems, scientists say.

 

Further research is essential for understanding the full impact forests and tree-based agricultural systems have on dietary and nutritional needs for at least 1 billion people whose livelihoods are directly affected by forests, the scientists said in a discussion paper released ahead of the International Conference on Forests for Food Security and Nutrition hosted by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome.

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Global warming has not stalled, insists world's best-known climate scientist

Global warming has not stalled, insists world's best-known climate scientist | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
Since 1998, when the Niño climate phenomenon caused global temperatures to soar, the rate of increase in warming has slowed, causing some sceptics to suggest climate change has stopped or that the effect of rising carbon dioxide levels on climate is not as great as previously thought
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Fake Food Fight

Fake Food Fight | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

Every unit of the U.S. military, immediately prior to combat deployment, spends three weeks at the National Training Centre at Fort Irwin, California. Scattered across a base the size of Luxembourg, in the middle of the Mojave Desert, the Department of Defence has built fifteen simulated towns populated by 350 civilian role-players, many of Middle Eastern origin.

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As the cooking pot turns: Staple crop and animal foods are being ‘recalibrated’ for a warmer world » ILRI news

As the cooking pot turns: Staple crop and animal foods are being ‘recalibrated’ for a warmer world » ILRI news | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

CGIAR has just published a really useful snapshot of the world’s major food crops, animals and tree and water resources and what is likely to happen to them in the face of climate change, the effects of which on food production will require reexamining what’s in the cooking pot, especially in regions where people already do not get enough to eat.


Above, a worker on a small farm in Limuru, Kenya, pushes maize stalks (after their cobs have been harvested) through a pulverizer before feeding the stover to the cows; this is one way small-scale farmers can improve their dairy cow feeding and milk yields while reducing the amount of methane their cows generate per unit of milk produced. (Photo on Flickr by Luigi Guarino.)

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Why Rituals Work: Scientific American

Why Rituals Work: Scientific American | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

There are real benefits to rituals, religious or otherwise. Recent research suggests that rituals may be more rational than they appear. Why? Because even simple rituals can be extremely effective. Rituals performed after experiencing losses – from loved ones to lotteries – do alleviate grief, and rituals performed before high-pressure tasks – like singing in public – do in fact reduce anxiety and increase people’s confidence. What’s more, rituals appear to benefit even people who claim not to believe that rituals work. While anthropologists have documented rituals across cultures, this earlier research has been primarily observational. Recently, a series of investigations by psychologists have revealed intriguing new results demonstrating that rituals can have a causal impact on people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. 

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Analysis: Indonesia renews moratorium on logging, palm plantations

Analysis: Indonesia renews moratorium on logging, palm plantations | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it

Indonesia’s President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono made a bold and courageous decision this week to extend the country’s forest moratorium.  

 

Indonesia ranks as one of world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitters, largely due to the clearing of forest and peat lands. The forest moratoriumaims to address this problem by prohibiting any new licenses to log, clear, convert, or otherwise alter pristine forest and peat lands, an area encompassingmore than 43 million hectares of land. Forest users with existing licenses are still allowed to operate in these regions, and there are several exceptions to the rule.

 

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U.S. loses nearly a third of its honey bees this season

U.S. loses nearly a third of its honey bees this season | Africa and Beyond | Scoop.it
Nearly a third of managed honeybee colonies in America died out or disappeared over the winter, an annual survey found on Wednesday. The decline—which was far worse than the winter before—threatens the survival of some bee colonies.
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Returns: Becoming Indigenous in the Twenty-First Century: James Clifford: 9780674724921: Amazon.com: Books

Returns: Becoming Indigenous in the Twenty-First Century

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It was once widely assumed that native, or tribal, societies were destined to disappear. Sooner or later, irresistible economic and political forces would complete the work of destruction set in motion by culture contact and colonialism. But many aboriginal groups persist, a reality that complicates familiar narratives of modernization and progress. History, Clifford invites us to observe, is a multidirectional process, and the word "indigenous," long associated with primitivism and localism, is taking on new, unexpected meanings.

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Innovative grassland management systems for environmental and livelihood benefits

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