Jebel Mokram Group


The Jebel Mokram Group was a prehistoric, neolithic culture that flourished in the second millennium BC in the West of the Sudan and in western Eritrea. The culture appeared around 1800 and followed the Gash Group.
So far, the culture is little researched and is mainly known from a few archaeological sites. The Jebel Mokram Group is characterized by its pottery. Typical are thick and round vessel rims. Vessels are often decorated with an incised net pattern Similar pottery is known from the Pan-grave people of Sudan and Egypt and also from the Kerma culture. Different types of stone tools were used. Fragments of Egyptian pottery attest some sort of contacts with Egypt. The Jebel Mokram Group produced small clay figures of animals. Several settlement site are known, providing evidence that the Jebel Mokram Group people lived in light huts. It seems that they were basically herdsmen.