The Kerio Valley is the site of elaborate irrigation systems that were constructed during earlier periods of history. These structures are believed to have been built by descendants of the
Neolithic Afro-Asiatic people who introduced domesticated plants and animals to the
Great Lakes region—a succession of societies collectively known as the
Stone Bowl cultural complex. Most of these early northern migrants are said to have been absorbed by later movements of
Nilotic and
Bantu people. Although the particular irrigation systems in the Kerio Valley are today maintained by the Marakwet subgroup of the Kalenjin Nilotes, the latter assert that they were the work of a northern people of a peculiar language called the
Sirikwa, who were later decimated by pestilence. According to the Marakwet, the Sirikwa "built the furrows, but they did not teach us how to build them; we only know how to keep them as they are." The missing link however re-occurs in Tanzania out of an ethnic community known as
Iraqw. The Iraqw openly admit to be the masterminds behind the constructions and links to the
Engaruka complex in Tanzania.
Sengwer ethnicity of Kalenjin,
Talai clan of the
Kipsigiis and
Nandi are believed to be facets of the Iraqw who took a Kalenjin identity. ==People==