Hurd, W. (2016). Surviving the Second Conquest: Emperor Menelik and Industrial Plantations in Ethiopia’s Omo Valley. Solutions 7(1): 68–73. thesolutionsjournal.com/2016/1/surviving-the-second-conquest
Solutions in History
Surviving the Second Conquest: Emperor Menelik and Industrial Plantations in Ethiopia’s Omo Valley by Will Hurd
Susan Hurd
A Mursi girl and young man, photographed in 2008.
T
he many times I arrived at Bole airport in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, there was always a sign that said “Welcome Home.” Its meaning never registered until an official from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism said it reminds all visitors that their ancestors were originally Ethiopian. Not only have fossils of our pre-human ancestors Lucy, Australopithecus
afarensis, and Ardi, Ardipithecus ramidus, been found in Ethiopia, but so have the oldest known fossils of Homo sapiens. These come from an area near the Omo River, now home to a small indigenous group, the Mursi. This area was designated the ‘Lower Valley of the Omo World Heritage Site’ in 1980 because of “its fundamental importance to the study of human
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evolution.”1 One theory has it that humans may have first settled on the shoreline of Lake Turkana 200,000 years ago when the lake was about 60 miles north of where it is today.2,3 Lake Turkana was once so large that it connected to the Nile River, with which it still shares the same species of fish. Turkana is the world’s largest desert lake. It has no outlet and