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<title>GEOARCHAEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION OF CITY WALL CONSTRUCTION TECHNOLOGY IN OYO ILE, OYO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1904</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-04T11:54:10Z</dc:date>
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<title>GEOARCHAEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION OF CITY WALL CONSTRUCTION TECHNOLOGY IN OYO ILE, OYO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1905</link>
<description>GEOARCHAEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION OF CITY WALL CONSTRUCTION TECHNOLOGY IN OYO ILE, OYO STATE, NIGERIA
ADEGOKE, Jimoh Niyi
Oyo-Ile, the capital of the Old Oyo Empire located on the extreme northwest of presentday Yorubaland, Nigeria was an important polity in West Africa between the 16th and 19th&#13;
centuries A.D. The city walls, in their current conditions, are in need of restoration towards&#13;
conservation of the wall system. Previous archaeological investigations on the palace walls&#13;
had focused on their circumference, the areas covered, description of the types of walls,&#13;
and elucidation of their functions. However, limited attention has been paid to construction&#13;
techniques, the composition of materials used, and the mode of emplacement of the&#13;
artefacts found in the walls. The aim of the study was to investigate the construction&#13;
techniques, the composition of the sediment used, and the mode of emplacement of the&#13;
potsherds in the wall.&#13;
A cross-section excavation was conducted on the palace wall remains which enabled the&#13;
examination of the stratigraphy of the excavated units and the techniques used to build the&#13;
wall and its foundation, and the collection of artefacts, and sediment samples. The sediment&#13;
samples collected were subjected to granulometric analysis to determine their grain size.&#13;
The pH, exchangeable cations of the sediments were determined by standard methods and&#13;
minerals of the clay were determined from thin section. The mode of incorporation of the&#13;
potsherds into the wall was determined using pottery analysis.&#13;
Stratigraphy of the excavation showed the composition of the soil to be lateritic clay&#13;
comprising a very fine-grained gravely sand thoroughly kneaded with plant fibres. The&#13;
construction technique of the palace wall was no more traceable because the wall has been&#13;
reduced to a massive hillock. The colour characteristics of the sediments ranged from&#13;
reddish gray, yellowish red to reddish brown. The pH of the sediments ranged from 5.5-&#13;
7.5, and was consistent with the pH of the “brownearths” soil type characteristic of mixed&#13;
deciduous woodland zone within which Oyo-Ile is located. The sediment was stable and&#13;
resistant to erosion by the nature of its mineral assemblages (Quartz, Garnet, Tourmaline,&#13;
Rutile and Rock fragment) and exchange cations (K+, Na+, Ca2+, and Mg2+). The potsherds&#13;
were crude and poorly fired with thickness of 0.5-1.2 cm. The sherds were mainly&#13;
undecorated and their emplacement in the wall remains was evenly spread across the&#13;
stratigraphic layers. The features of the potsherds were not consistent with those used for&#13;
domestic, ritual or industrial purposes; rather the sherds were intentionally added to the&#13;
palace wall during construction&#13;
The palace wall at Oyo-Ile was built directly on a lateritic ground as its foundation.&#13;
However, the specific technique used to construct the palace wall could not be established.&#13;
Potsherds were deliberately mixed with the sediments to strengthen the wall.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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