Pharaohs connected to Egypt by Tunisia Evidence of habitation in the North African region by human ancestors has been found stretching back one or two million years, yet not to rival those most-ancient finds in south and east Africa. Remains of
Homo erectus during the Middle
Pleistocene, circa 750
kya (thousands of years ago), has been found in North Africa. These were associated with the change in early
hominid tool use form pebble-choppers to hand-axes.
Migrations out of south and east Africa since 100 Kya are thought to have established current human populations worldwide.
Cavalli-Sforza includes the
Berber populations in a much larger
genetic group, one which also includes S.W. Asians, Iranians, Europeans, Sardinians, Indians, S.E. Indians, and Lapps. "[B]y definition prehistoric
archaeology is dealing with pre-written sources only, so that all
prehistory is anonymous." Hence, "it is inevitably mainly concerned with the material culture" such as "stone tools, bronze weapons, hut foundations, tombs, field walks, and the like." ... "We have no way of learning the moral and religious ideas of the protohistoric city dwellers... ." Regarding the evidence of prehistory, very remote epochs often give clues only about
physical anthropology, i.e., per biological remains re human evolution. Usually the later millennia progressively disclose more and more
cultural information yet, absent writings, it is mostly limited to "material culture". Generally
cultural data is considered a far more telling indication of prehistoric human behavior and society, as compared to only evidence of physical human remains. The cultural data available about human prehistory derived from material artifacts, however, too often directly concerns "non-essentials". It is limited as a useful source about the finer details of archaic human societies—the ethical norms, the individual dilemmas—when compared to the data from written sources. "When prehistorians speak of the ideas and ideals of men before writing, they are making guesses--intelligent guesses by people best qualified to make them, but nevertheless guesses." Perhaps the most significant
prehistoric finding worldwide concerns events surrounding the
Neolithic Revolution. Then humans developed significant jumps in
cognitive ability. The evidence of the
art and expressive artifacts dating back about 10 to 12
kya show a new sophistication in handling experience, perhaps being the fruits of prior advances in the articulation of
symbols and language.
Herding and
farming develop. A new phase of human evolution had begun. "The rich heritage of rock painting in North Africa... seem to date after the Pleistocene period... around twelve thousand years ago." Thus a period concurrent with the "neolithic" revolution.
Mesolithic era [Berber:
Plateau of the Chasms] Dating to the much more recent
Mesolithic era, stone blades and tools, as well as small stone human figurines, of the
Capsian culture (named after
Gafsa in Tunisia) are associated with the prehistoric presence of Berbers in
North Africa. The Capsian is that archaic culture native to the
Maghrib region, circa twelve to eight
kya. During this period the
Pleistocene came to an end with the last
ice age, causing changes in the Mediterranean climate. The African shore slowly became drier as the "rain belts moved north". Also related to the Berbers are some of the prehistoric monuments built using
very large rocks (
dolmens). Located both in Europe and Africa, these dolmens are found at locations throughout the western Mediterranean. The Capsian culture was preceded by the
Ibero-Maurusian in North Africa.
Saharan rock art Saharan rock art, the inscriptions and the paintings that show various design patterns as well as figures of animals and of humans, are attributed to the Berbers and also to black Africans from the south. Dating these art works has proven difficult and unsatisfactory. Egyptian influence is considered very unlikely. Some images infer a terrain much better watered. Among the animals depicted, alone or in staged scenes, are large-horned buffalo (the extinct
bubalus antiquus), elephants, donkeys, colts, rams, herds of cattle, a lion and lioness with three cubs, leopards or cheetahs, hogs, jackals, rhinoceroses, giraffes, hippopotamus, a hunting dog, and various antelope. Human hunters may wear animal masks and carry their weapons. Herders are shown with elaborate head ornamentation; a few dance. Other human figures drive chariots, or ride camels.
Theory of mixed origin A commonly held view of Berber origins is that Paleo-Mediterranean peoples long occupying the region combined with several other largely
Mediterranean groups, two from the east near S.W.Asia and bringing the Berber languages about eight to ten
kya (one traveling west along the coast and the other by way of the Sahel and the Sahara), with a third intermingling earlier from
Iberia. "At all events, the historic peopling of the Maghrib is certainly the result of a merger, in proportions not yet determined, of three elements:
Ibero-Maurusian,
Capsian and Neolithic," the last being "true proto-Berbers".
Cavalli-Sforza also makes two related observations. First, the Berbers and those S.W. Asians who speak Semitic idioms together belong to a large and ancient
language family (the
Afroasiatic), which dates back perhaps ten kya. Second, this large language family incorporates in its ranks members from two different genetic groups, i.e., (a) some elements of the one listed by Cavalli-Sforza immediately above, and (b) one called by him the
Ethiopian group. This Ethiopian group inhabits lands from the
Horn to the
Sahel region of Africa. In agreement with Cavalli-Sforza's work, recent
demographic study indicates a common Neolithic origin for both the Berber and
Semitic populations. A widespread opinion is that the Berbers are a mixed ethnic group sharing the related and ancient Berber languages. Perhaps eight millennia ago, already there were prior peoples established here, among whom the proto-Berbers (coming from the east) mingled and mixed, and from whom the Berber people would spring, during an era of their
ethnogenesis. Today half or more of modern Tunisians appear to be the descendants, however mixed or not, of ancient Berber ancestors. ==Berber language history==