Over 8,500 years ago, before the first farmers start to settle the land, seafaring hunter gatherers were visiting islands such as Malta.

The seafarers travelled to these islands before the development of sail technology, using canoes to do so.

 A research team – led by Professor Eleanor Scerri of the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology (MPI-GEA) and the University of Malta – found hunter-gatherers were crossing at least 100km of open water to reach the Mediterranean island of Malta 8,500 years ago, a thousand years before the arrival of agricultural practises.

Cave site of Latnija in the northern Mellieħa region of Malta.
Cave site of Latnija in the northern Mellieħa region of Malta. Image credit: Huw Groucott

At the cave site of Latnija in the northern Mellieħa region of Malta, the research team found the traces of humans in the form of their stone tools, hearths, and cooked food waste.

Small, remote islands were long thought to have been the last frontiers of pristine natural systems.

Humans were not thought to have been able to reach or inhabit these environments prior to the dawn of agriculture, and the technological shift that accompanied this transition.

Men in canoes making their way towards the islands
Hunter-gatherers were crossing at least 100 km of open water to reach the Mediterranean island of Malta 8,500 years ago, a thousand years before the arrival of the first farmers. Image credit: Daniel Clark / MPI GEA

“Even on the longest day of the year, these seafarers would have had over several hours of darkness in open water,” explained Professor Nicholas Vella of the University of Malta, co-investigator of the study.

Dr Mathew Stewart, from Griffith University’s Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution, analysed the animal remains from this site as part of the study. He said:

“At the site we recovered a diverse array of animals, including hundreds of remains of deer, birds, tortoises, and foxes.

“The incorporation of a diverse range of terrestrial and, especially, marine fauna into the diet likely enabled these hunter-gatherers to sustain themselves on an island as small as Malta.”

The team of researchers found clear evidence for the exploitation of marine resources.

“We found remains of seal, various fish, including grouper, and thousands of edible marine gastropods, crabs and sea urchins, all indisputably cooked,” said Dr James Blinkhorn of the University of Liverpool and MPI-GEA, one of the study’s corresponding authors.

These discoveries also raised questions about the extinction of endemic animals on Malta and other small and remote Mediterranean islands, and whether distant Mesolithic communities may have been linked through seafaring.

“The results add a thousand years to Maltese prehistory and force a re-evaluation of the seafaring abilities of Europe’s last hunter-gatherers, as well as their connections and ecosystem impacts,” added Professor Scerri.

The findings ‘Hunter-gatherer sea voyages extended to remotest Mediterranean islands’ have been published in Nature. Click on this link to access, Hunter-gatherer sea voyages extended to remotest Mediterranean islands.

The discoveries were made by a scientific consortium led by Professor Eleanor Scerri of the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology (MPI-GEA) and the University of Malta. At the cave site of Latnija in the northern Mellieħa region of Malta. The research was supported by Malta’s Superintendence of Cultural Heritage, and funded by the European Research Council and the University of Malta’s Research Excellence Award

One response to “Before the Age of Sails: The Hunter Gatherer Seafarers”

  1. I’m thinking of Mata, the old Polynesian wave maps made of sticks which show how each land mass affects the waves around them, and so helped with navigation between the islands……… https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Islands_stick_chart

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