Study of East African maritime traditions shows changes in boatbuilding

A recent academic study provides a comprehensive insight into the maritime traditions of East Africa, showcasing both the evolution of boatbuilding techniques and the enduring use of wooden vessels by local fishers.

First detailed academic study of East African maritime traditions shows changes in boatbuildingA ngalawa. Credit: Lucy Blue

Researchers employed pH๏τogrammetry technology to document watercraft in the Zanzibar Channel, a vital resource for the region’s livelihoods. While large local vessels like the mtepe, dau la mtepe, and jahazis have diminished due to modern transport infrastructure, shifts in the mangrove-pole trade, and changes in the broader Indian Ocean’s political economy, smaller fishing vessels continue to ply the Zanzibar Channel.

These small-scale artisanal fishing boats are thriving, primarily driven by population growth, leading to declining stocks and rising catch rates in inshore waters.

The study, conducted in 2018 on Unguja, the primary island of the Zanzibar archipelago, and in 2019–2020 in Bagamoyo, mainland Tanzania, highlights the diversity of wooden fishing and cargo-carrying watercraft in the region.

The research contradicts earlier predictions of a decline and disappearance of wooden watercraft in East Africa. The large ocean-going vessels of the monsoon trade have been absent for over half a century.

Local fishers use vessels like the ngalawa for various types of net and line fishing depending on the season and the size of the fish. For instance, during the prawn season, they utilize the ngalawa to access estuarine shallows, where they catch small prawns using fine hand-held nets.

The mashua ndogo, a relatively rare vessel, requires specific skills in joining logs and is more expensive to make than other dugouts due to the size of trees needed. Meanwhile, the boti la mtando, ngwanda, and diminutive dingi represent innovations in boatbuilding and fishing methods, incorporating outboard engines and portable electric generators for new techniques such as seine-netting, purse-seine netting, and the use of artificial light to attract fish at night.

However, the introduction of such equipment has raised concerns among fishers and regulators about its impact on fish-stock conservation and potential conflicts. The fate of these wooden watercraft depends on various factors, including national forestry management policies, timber prices, the compeтιтiveness of fiberglᴀss and metal boats, regional fish stock management, and alternative livelihood opportunities for the younger generation.

The research, conducted by John P. Cooper and Alessandro Ghidoni from the University of Exeter, Lucy Blue from the University of Southampton, and Elgidius B. Ichumbaki from the University of Dar Es Salaam, was published in the International Journal of Nautical Archaeology.

Dr. Cooper emphasized that the vessels’ future depends on factors like forestry management policies, timber prices, compeтιтion from fiberglᴀss and metal boats, regional fish stock management, and alternative livelihood opportunities for the younger generation.

University of Exeter

More information: John P. Cooper et al, (2022). Contemporary Wooden Watercraft of the Zanzibar Channel, Tanzania: Type and Technology, Continuity and Innovation, International Journal of Nautical Archaeology. DOI: 10.1080/10572414.2021.2015913

Related Posts

Ancient Greco-Roman sculptures were scented, study reveals

Ancient Greco-Roman sculptures were scented, study reveals

Scholars have known for centuries that the ancient Greek and Roman statues, far from being the immaculate white marble figures put on view in museums today, were…

2,000-year-old large wooden houses uncovered in Zhejiang, revealing secrets of the Yue Kingdom

2,000-year-old large wooden houses uncovered in Zhejiang, revealing secrets of the Yue Kingdom

Archaeologists in Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, have unearthed a well-preserved ancient settlement dating back 2,500 years, belonging to the Yue State of the early Warring States period (475-221…

Mikveh ritual bath discovered in Ostia Antica, Italy

Mikveh ritual bath discovered in Ostia Antica, Italy

Archaeologists in Ostia Antica, the ancient port city near Rome, have made an amazing discovery—a Mikveh, a Jewish ritual bath, from the late 4th or early 5th…

First burials: evidence of Neanderthals and Homo sapiens sharing culture 110,000 years ago

First burials: evidence of Neanderthals and Homo sapiens sharing culture 110,000 years ago

A recent discovery in Tinshemet Cave, central Israel, is changing the way we look at early human interactions. Archaeologists have found human burials from the Middle Paleolithic…

Teeth from burial pit in Mongolia trace Han soldiers in the Xiongnu war

Teeth from burial pit in Mongolia trace Han soldiers in the Xiongnu war

New information on a mᴀss burial found at the Bayanbulag site in Mongolia, which is thought to hold the remains of Han warriors who participated in the…

Mystery of the Arnish Moor Man: Belongings of 18th-Century Suspected Murder Victim on Display

Mystery of the Arnish Moor Man: Belongings of 18th-Century Suspected Murder Victim on Display

A new exhibition showing the personal items of a mystery 18th-century man, known as the Arnish Moor Man, has opened at the Kinloch Historical Society on the…