Time travelling through Olorgesailie

An otherwise dry river in spate near Mt Olorgesailie. PHOTO| RUPI MANGAT

What you need to know:

  • Tiny white flowers and petals of yellow on skeletal green stalks carpet the ground.
  • I’m at Olorgesailie, home of our ancestors, the upright human (or Homo erectus) who walked out of Africa and into the bigger world a million years ago.

I’m alone, walking between two ancient volcanoes set on sands that have been bleached white by the relentless sun over the decades, with volcanic rubble strewn around.

Tiny white flowers and petals of yellow on skeletal green stalks carpet the ground. I’m at Olorgesailie, home of our ancestors, the upright human (or Homo erectus) who walked out of Africa and into the bigger world a million years ago.

In my aloneness my mind begins to wander. Was there a woman like me who strolled the same earth that I am on to stop and marvel at the wild flowers and pick at the flame-red wild lily?

Did she stand on the high vantage point like me to take in the enormity of the landscape – the copper red cliffs and the ridge lining the western horizon from where the moon rises?

And did she climb down to take shelter under the canopy of the slow growing commiphora to watch the hunt taking place?

A few steps away I’m looking at the fossilised femur of the Elephus recki – a gigantic elephant that walked the land for three million years and then vanished 660,000 years ago.

Around the fossilised thigh bone of this elephant that was more related to the Asian elephant lie tools that were fabricated by our human ancestor, Homo erectus.

STONE TOOLS

These are the famous stone tools of Olorgesailie.

Theories abound. One is that the elephant could have been butchered here 992,000 years ago. At this point, Homo erectus was a savvy tool maker, manufacturing sharp-edged stone hand-axes to slice through the flesh of an animal.

The kilometre-long walk along the ancient soils of Olorgesailie has me pass the millennia-old hippo fossil and more stone tools found in-situ. It’s a slow stroll – I’m in no hurry even though it’s midday.

At most times the site, lying on the floor of the Rift Valley, has temperatures soaring up to 40 degrees centigrade making all seek shade.

But it’s the season of the long rains and we’re seeing something that most of us have never seen around Olorgesailie – water.

Driving in from Nairobi, the rivers that are always scorched riverbeds are now in full spate. There’s stone rubble from the landslides on the road

and skies laden with clouds atop the Ngong Hills, capping the volcanoes of Esakut and Olorgesailie. Lake Kwenia and another water pool lie on

either side of Olorgesaili – again, something I have never seen before.

“I’ve never seen this river so high,” exclaims Fleur Ng’weno of Nature Kenya. “The rains this year have been heavy and scattered unlike the normal rains that are long and steady.” It’s part of climate change, she reasons.

We go inside the simple museum that has such a wealth of human history. It shows the hand axes that date between 1.2 million years to 500,000 years. With time, the Homo got smarter and made sophisticated one-strike flakes, heralding the Middle Stone Age.

Olorgesailie is super-intriguing. According to Dr Rick Potts of the Smithsonian Institute, who has been studying the site for more than 20 years, these rocks weren’t found locally. Their original location was 150 kilometres away meaning that the ‘upright human’ was trading even then.

At this point my attention is diverted to a glass cage with two nondescript fragments in it. They are two fragments of the cranium (skull) of the very first human fossil discovered at Olorgesailie. Dated at 900,000 years ago, they were identified in 2003 when Christopher Kilonzi of the National Museums of Kenya cleaned the sediment rock that was excavated in 1999 and later in 2003 by the team headed by Dr Potts from the Smithsonian Institute and NMK. 

 

 

All about Olorgesailie Prehistoric Site www.museums.or.ke

Join Nature Kenya for exciting hikes naturekenya.org. Olorgesailie is the best dated prehistoric site in the world. In 1947, the first African Archaeology Congress was held, at which time the gang walk around the stone tool sites was built. The signs and gang walk need to be maintained. Some of the boards that contain exciting information are falling apart.

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