Despite decades of archaeological research, the beginnings of iron metallurgy in sub-Saharan Africa remain largely poorly understood.
This technological revolution, essential for producing efficient tools, appeared there at least 3,000 years ago. While exploring an archaeological site in eastern Senegal, an international team led by the University of Geneva (UNIGE) uncovered the remarkably well-preserved remains of an iron smelting workshop dating from the 4th century BC and used for nearly eight centuries.
This discovery, published in African Archaeological Review, provides valuable information to better understand metallurgical practices from the late prehistoric period in Africa.
In Europe, the Iron Age is generally placed between 800 BC and the end of the 1st century AD. But these chronological boundaries vary by region around the world. The earliest iron production would thus date back to the 2nd millennium BC in the regions of Anatolia, present-day Turkey, and the Caucasus. These techniques spread from there to Europe, but were they invented independently in Africa? The question remains open.
This site offers a unique opportunity to study the continuity and adaptation of an iron smelting technique over the long term.
The workshop consists of a vast mound of around a hundred tons of slag, an arrangement in arcs of about thirty used "tuyeres" - clay conduits that allowed air to be blown into the fire - and 35 circular furnace bases about 30 cm (about 12 inches) deep. This production of iron and steel was probably carried out on a small scale to meet local needs, particularly for making agricultural tools.
A remarkable feature: these tuyeres do not have a single air outlet, but several small openings connected to the main conduit by perpendicular lateral channels, allowing air to be diffused towards the bottom of the furnace as well. Another unprecedented characteristic, the metallurgists used palm nuts as packing material for the bottom of the furnace, a practice previously unknown.
"Despite the very long period of use of this workshop, this tradition remained remarkably stable, undergoing only minor technical adjustments. This continuity contrasts with other African metallurgical contexts and highlights the importance of understanding the technical and cultural choices of the first metallurgists to produce iron," explains Anne Mayor, director of the ARCAN laboratory in the Biology Section of the UNIGE Faculty of Sciences and senior lecturer at the Global Studies Institute, who led this work.
The team's research continues on other sites in Senegal to compare practices and better understand the evolution of iron metallurgy skills. Today, only about a dozen well-documented and well-dated sites from the first millennium BC are known for the whole of West Africa.