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1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Nobody: 1:41pm On Dec 27, 2017
[img]http://img.purch.com/h/1400/aHR0cDovL3d3dy5saXZlc2NpZW5jZS5jb20vaW1hZ2VzL2kvMDAwLzA5Mi85Nzgvb3JpZ2luYWwvd2VzdC1hZnJpY2FuLWJlYWRzLmpwZw[/img]

A newly discovered treasure trove of more than 10,000 colorful glass beads, as well as evidence of glassmaking tools, suggests that an ancient city in southwestern Nigeria was one of the first places in West Africa to master the complex art of glassmaking, scientists reported.

The finding shows that people who lived in the ancient city of Ile-Ife learned how to make their own glass using local materials and fashion it into colorful beads, said study lead researcher Abidemi Babalola, a fellow at Harvard University's Hutchins Center for African & African American Research.

"Now we know that, at least from the 11th to 15th centuries [A.D.], there was primary glass production in sub-Saharan Africa," said Babalola, who specializes in African archaeology. [The 25 Most Mysterious Archaeological Finds on Earth]


Ancient city of IIe-Ife
The ancient city of Ile-Ife was the ancestral home of the Yoruba, an ethnic group of people who live in Africa today. The Yoruba people view Ile-Ife as the mythic birthplace of several of their deities, Babalola and his colleagues wrote in the study.

Ile-Ife is also widely known for its copper alloy and terracotta heads and figurines that were made between the 12th and 15th centuries A.D., the researchers said.

Some of the figurines are decorated with glass beads on their headdresses, crowns, necklaces, armlets and anklets, the researchers said. Moreover, archaeologists have found glass beads at Ile-Ife's ancient shrines and within unearthed crucibles — ceramic containers that were used to melt glass.

Where did these glass beads come from? Most researchers speculated that the beads arrived from afar through trade, possibly from the Mediterranean area or the Middle East, and that artisans in Ile-Ife used crucibles to melt and refashion some of them into new beads, Babalola told Live Science.

But Babalola and a handful of other researchers suspected that the answer was closer to home. To find out, Babalola traveled to Igbo-Olokun, an archaeological site within Ile-Ife, and excavated several places from 2011 to 2012, searching for evidence of local glass production, he said.

Crystal clear
Babalola discovered a treasure trove during the excavation, finding almost 13,000 beads, 812 crucible fragments, 403 fragments of ceramic cylinders (rods that were possibly used to handle the crucible lids), almost 7 lbs. (3 kilograms) of glass waste and about 14,000 potsherds, the researchers wrote in the study.

Babalola didn't find any furnaces that would have helped artisans heat the crucibles, but "the abundance of glass-production debris and the presence of vitrified clay fragments [clay with melted glass on it] indicate, however, that these areas were in, or very near, a zone of glass workshops," the researchers wrote in the study.

The majority of the beads are less than 0.2 inches (5 millimeters) across, and are colored blue, green, red, yellow or multicolored, Babalola said.
[img]http://img.purch.com/h/1400/aHR0cDovL3d3dy5saXZlc2NpZW5jZS5jb20vaW1hZ2VzL2kvMDAwLzA5Mi85Nzkvb3JpZ2luYWwvQmFiYWxvbGEtYmVhZHMuanBnPzE0OTczNjE3NjQ[/img]
The researchers found that many of the beads, primarily the blue ones, were made "almost exclusively" from materials that are found near Igbo-Olokun, they wrote in the study. For instance, these beads had a high aluminum-oxide (also known as alumina) content, and previous researchers have pointed out that there are high-alumina sand deposits near Ile-Ife, Babalola said.

What's more, artisans might have used local ingredients, such as feldspar, to lower the heating temperature needed to melt glass in the crucibles, he said.

Glass world
The beads Babalola and his colleagues studied are called drawn beads, meaning artisans used a special technique that included using an air bubble to make the beads' holes. Craftspeople in India were making drawn glass beads as early as the fourth century B.C., but given the distance between India and modern-day Nigeria, Babalola and his colleagues propose that the West Africans developed the technique independently, he said.
However, more research is needed to support this claim, Babalola noted.
After the West African people made these beads, they traded them far and wide. Beads with the same components have been found in the upper Senegal region, including in Mali, and along the Niger River, the researchers wrote in the study.
The findings also show that West Africans were more technologically advanced than previously thought, Babalola said.
"We are talking about very sophisticated crafts," he said. "It takes someone who knows what he is doing and someone who has a very good understanding of science and technology to make this glass."

Source: https://www.livescience.com/59462-early-glassmaking-west-africa.html

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Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Nobody: 1:47pm On Dec 27, 2017
Lalasticlala

1 Like

Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Nobody: 1:54pm On Dec 27, 2017
angry

∆ Magnificent Relic ∆
Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by ProjectNaija(m): 2:05pm On Dec 27, 2017
Pictures please.

2 Likes

Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Nobody: 2:08pm On Dec 27, 2017
ProjectNaija:
Pictures please.
I added pix i wonder why they arent displaying. Just click the img links.
Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by OkutaNla: 4:47pm On Dec 27, 2017
See the pic below. Our people have been using native intelligence to create solutions and innovations since time immemorial. I recently learned that the popular black soap is a Yoruba invention. And that it was Yoruba female traders that exported the craft and know-how to the Ghanaians.

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Nobody: 5:17pm On Dec 27, 2017
OkutaNla:
See the pic below. Our people have been using native intelligence to create solutions and innovations since time immemorial. I recently learned that the popular black soap is a Yoruba invention. And that it was Yoruba female traders that exported the craft and know-how to the Ghanaians.
Thanks so much bro. I actually added pix but for some reason they arent showing. Thanks loads. And regarding the black soap, it is indeed a yoruba invention.

3 Likes

Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Olu317(m): 6:11pm On Dec 27, 2017
ProjectNaija:
Pictures please.
Research still being done continuously in ILE IFE and other Yoruba cities and towns . Below are Some of the beads that still make Caucasian /White researchers see us as a unique ethnicity.

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Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Nobody: 8:38pm On Dec 28, 2017
Hmm
Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by geosegun(m): 1:09am On Dec 29, 2017
There seemed to be something with the Yorubas. I am curious to know these things. It's a matter of time when some spectacular things would be revealed. A people that started IFA (Oracle) can invent anything...
Quote me anytime and anywhere

4 Likes

Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by nobaga: 5:13am On Dec 29, 2017
Just wait. Bini children will soon claim it was their invention by a prince called izozoduduwawa. It means the greatest inventor in Ogigoso.

Seriously, I wish more researchers go to Iwo Eleru where some artifacts were dated 10,000 before Christ.

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Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by OlaoChi: 11:39am On Dec 29, 2017
Henryyy:
Lalasticlala
Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by seunny4lif(m): 4:23pm On Dec 29, 2017
Wow
Proudly Yoruba

Waiting for Igbo version and Benin version
Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by geosegun(m): 7:43pm On May 14, 2018
OkutaNla:
See the pic below. Our people have been using native intelligence to create solutions and innovations since time immemorial. I recently learned that the popular black soap is a Yoruba invention. And that it was Yoruba female traders that exported the craft and know-how to the Ghanaians.

Yes, we used to call it ose dudu (Black soap). If I have thorn stucked in my hand or feet and apply the black soap overnight. It soften the spot and I can remove it effortlessly the following day. It's highly effective.

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Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by googi: 4:27pm On May 15, 2018
Another Bini discovery claimed by Yoruba.

Now show us proof say na Yoruba. BTW, Iwo Eleru has Ogiso written all over it.

Bini the great standing or seated on Yoruba shoulders forever.

1 Like

Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by PeterKbaba: 9:26pm On May 15, 2018
Behind the Glass | New Discoveries in Early Nigerian Glassmaking


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SATzs_5rdEk

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Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by Ayobami7(m): 12:42pm On Nov 13, 2018
This is my Comment
Re: 1,000-year-old Colored Glass Beads Discovered In West Africa by babtoundey(m): 6:47pm On Nov 13, 2018
oyinbos just came and spoilt everything for us. They oppressed and banished our emerging technology and innovations and replaced them with their established arts. How I wish Africa can look back and take its rightful position. The solution to our problems as a nation lies within.

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