词条 | Burchell's Shelter |
释义 |
HistoryStrong springs near the head of the valley – at what would become the village of Campbell – had been noted by the Griqua polity based at Klaarwater (Griquatown) in 1805, but it was not before 1811 that they occupied the place, then known as ‘Knovel Valley'.[3] In that year the missionary the Revd Lambert Jansz, in the company of the traveller William Burchell, took possession of the fountains (springs) in the name of the London Missionary Society. During this visit Burchell met and described the inhabitants of the rock shelter in the kloof. As they were soon afterwards absorbed into the community settling at what became Campbell, Burchell's account is a description of people at the very end of the Stone Age hunter-gatherer phase in this area.[4] References1. ^Burchell, W. J. 1822. Travels in the Interior of South Africa. 2nd ed. 1953. London: Batchworth. {{coord missing|South Africa}}{{SouthAfrica-stub}}{{Africa-archaeology-stub}}2. ^Humphreys, A.J.B. 1975. Burchell's Shelter: The History and Archaeology of a Northern Cape Rock Shelter. South African Archaeological Bulletin, Vol. 30, No. 117/118 (Jun., 1975), pp. 3-18 3. ^Arnot, D. & Orpen, F.H. 1875.The Land Question of Griqualand West. Cape Town: Saul. p. 160 4. ^Humphreys, A.J.B. 1975. Burchell's Shelter: The History and Archaeology of a Northern Cape Rock Shelter. South African Archaeological Bulletin, Vol. 30, No. 117/118 (Jun., 1975), pp. 3-18 4 : Archaeological sites in South Africa|Caves of South Africa|Historic preservation|Landforms of the Northern Cape |
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