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The statement is incorrect; while some early South African termites built massive mounds, evidence of large-scale pre-colonial human construction is limited. The tallest known structures in the region before 1652 were likely termite mounds, some of which date back tens of thousands of years.

Termite mounds: Massive termite mounds have been found in South Africa, and some are over 34,000 years old. These structures were often very large and served as a form of "ecosystem engineering".

Human-built structures: While Southern Africa was inhabited by various groups before 1652, the presence of large, monumental structures comparable to the termite mounds built before this time is not well-documented. The largest structures before European settlement were primarily created by natural forces or insects.

Impact of colonialism: The arrival of European farmers in 1652 brought new agricultural practices and a different way of building and organizing society, but many of the existing structures were built by nature rather than humans.

> **The statement is incorrect**; while some early **South African termites built massive mounds**, evidence of large-scale pre-colonial human construction is limited. **The tallest known structures in the region before 1652 were likely termite mounds, some of which date back tens of thousands of years.** > Termite mounds: Massive termite mounds have been found in South Africa, and some are over 34,000 years old. These structures were often very large and served as a form of "ecosystem engineering". > Human-built structures: While Southern Africa was inhabited by various groups before 1652, the presence of large, monumental structures comparable to the termite mounds built before this time is not well-documented. The largest structures before European settlement were primarily created by natural forces or insects. > Impact of colonialism: The arrival of European farmers in 1652 brought new agricultural practices and a different way of building and organizing society, but many of the existing structures were built by nature rather than humans.
[–] 2 pts

Slighly more based

Not quite.

though this does not diminish the existence or achievements of indigenous sub-Saharan agricultural societies.

While the Khoikhoi were present, and later grain farmers from other parts of Africa arrived

The only grain farmers were White settlers. The bantu niggers later on heard about it and like the useless parasites they are, they moved there to get free gibs from White people.

Niggers didn't build anything in SA, the few feral tribes who wandered there were only eating each-others, mud cakes and roots.

[–] 1 pt

True. Took me a while to get it to admit to the truth:

Who lived where in 1652: At the Cape (where the Dutch landed): Khoikhoi (pastoralist herders with cattle/sheep/goats) San (hunter-gatherers) Both groups used Stone Age technology - they never had iron-working The Khoikhoi had some copper and copper alloys (obtained through trade from the north, not made locally)

though maybe that too is a lie

[–] 2 pts

Don't worry, the kikes are working 24h/7 (lol not really, since they are paying pajeets to hardcode answers) to make sure Whites are erased from history and technological advancements.