All Object Lessons
Science & Nature

Ennedi Rock Art: When the Sahara Was Green

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 science, history, art, ethics, geography
Core question How can a set of paintings on a remote Saharan cliff face teach us not only about the people who made them but about one of the biggest climate changes in human history — and what does this teach us about how to read the deep past?
Rock paintings at Manda Gueli Cave in the Ennedi Plateau of northeastern Chad. Camels (later) painted over cattle (earlier) — a single rock wall recording the drying of the Sahara over thousands of years. Photo: David Stanley from Nanaimo, Canada / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 2.0
Introduction

In the northeastern corner of Chad, where the Sahara meets the Sahel, rises a great sandstone plateau called the Ennedi. The plateau covers about 40,000 square kilometres — roughly the size of Switzerland — and is one of the most dramatic landscapes in Africa. Wind and water have carved the sandstone into arches, towers, deep canyons, and natural rock shelters. The land is mostly desert today, but it holds permanent pools of water in its canyons, called gueltas, which support a small population of crocodiles, baboons, and gazelles. Throughout the plateau, on the walls of caves and shelters, are paintings and engravings made by humans over thousands of years. There are over 650 known rock art sites at Ennedi, with thousands of distinct images. The oldest paintings are perhaps 7,000 to 8,000 years old. The youngest are perhaps 400 years old. Together they form one of the richest rock art records in the Sahara. The art tells a story in three main periods. The oldest paintings (the Archaic Period, roughly 5,000-3,000 BCE) show wild animals — elephants, giraffes, rhinos, ostriches, antelopes — and the people who hunted them. The middle period (the Bovine or Pastoral Period, roughly 3,000-1,000 BCE) shows cattle. Many cattle. Whole herds, with their herders, their huts, and their daily life. The most recent period (the Camel Period, roughly 1,000 BCE to 1700 CE) shows dromedaries — the one-humped camels — and the riders who rode them, often armed with spears or swords. The change from one period to the next is not just a change in what the artists drew. It is a record of the changing climate. When the oldest paintings were made, the Sahara was savannah — green, wetter, full of grazing animals. Then it dried. Cattle replaced wild grazers because pastoralism could survive where hunting could not. Then the cattle could not survive either. The camel — which had been introduced to North Africa around 1,000 BCE — was the only large animal that could live in the new desert. The Sahara had become the desert we know today. The Ennedi rock art is therefore three things at once. It is art. It is history (telling us about the people who lived in the Ennedi region over 7,000 years). And it is science — a record of one of the largest climate changes in human history, written on rock walls by the people who lived through it. The Ennedi Plateau became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2016. The descendants of the painters — the Toubou and other Saharan peoples — still live in the region today. This lesson asks what the rock art is, how it records the drying of the Sahara, and what it teaches us about how we can read the deep past.

The object
Origin
Made by the ancestral peoples of what is now northeastern Chad — the same broad cultural lineage that produced the Toubou (Tubu) and related Saharan peoples of today. The oldest paintings are roughly 7,000 to 8,000 years old; the youngest may be as recent as 400 years old. Different periods reflect different communities, different climates, and different ways of life.
Period
Created continuously over a span of about 7,000 years, from approximately 5,000 BCE to the 17th century CE. Three broad periods are usually identified: the Archaic Period (wild animals, hunter-gatherers, roughly 5,000-3,000 BCE), the Bovine or Pastoral Period (cattle, herders, roughly 3,000-1,000 BCE), and the Camel Period (dromedaries, riders, roughly 1,000 BCE to 1700 CE). The art ends approximately when written records of the region begin.
Made of
Paintings made with mineral pigments — red and orange from ochre and haematite, white from kaolin clay, black from charcoal — mixed with water, animal fat, or other binders, and applied with fingers, brushes of plant fibre or animal hair, or by spraying through a tube. Engravings cut into the sandstone with stone or metal tools. Both kinds of art appear on the natural sandstone of the plateau — caves, rock shelters, vertical walls, and cliff faces.
Size
Individual figures vary from a few centimetres to over a metre tall. Some single rock shelters contain hundreds of overlapping images covering wall surfaces of many square metres. The Ennedi Plateau itself covers about 40,000 square kilometres — roughly the size of Switzerland — and contains over 650 known rock art sites.
Number of objects
Thousands of distinct paintings and engravings at over 650 documented sites. The complete inventory is still being made. Researchers expect that many sites remain undiscovered.
Where it is now
On the sandstone walls of the Ennedi Plateau, in the Ennedi Region of northeastern Chad, near the towns of Fada and Bao. The Ennedi Natural and Cultural Reserve protects the site. The plateau became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2016. Some of the most famous painted shelters are at Manda Gueli, Terkei, Niola Doa, and Wadi Archei.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The Ennedi rock art is a record of climate change as well as a cultural treasure. How will you balance the science (the drying of the Sahara) with the human story (the people who painted)?
  2. The Toubou and other Saharan peoples are living descendants of the painters. How will you treat this as a continuing story, not a closed one?
  3. Chad has been through serious modern conflict (civil wars, the Toyota War, ongoing instability). How will you handle the modern context honestly without dwelling on it?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine the Ennedi Plateau, 7,000 years ago. The climate is mild and wet — much wetter than today. Seasonal rains come reliably. Grass grows tall across the plains. Rivers and lakes hold water year-round. Forests of acacia and other trees line the wadis (seasonal river valleys). Elephants, giraffes, rhinos, hippopotamuses, lions, leopards, ostriches, and many species of antelope move across the landscape. The Sahara is not a desert. It is one of the great savannahs of the world, full of life. Humans live in this landscape too. They are hunter-gatherers, living in small groups, moving with the animals and the rains. They know every waterhole, every animal track, every season. They have stone tools, fire, language, music, and art. Sometimes they take coloured earth — red ochre, yellow ochre, white kaolin clay — and mix it with water or animal fat. With this paint, they record what they see. On the walls of caves and rock shelters, they paint the animals around them. Elephants with massive bodies. Giraffes with long necks. Lions creeping. Antelopes running. Sometimes they paint themselves — figures with bows, with spears, with hats and feathers, dancing or hunting. They use red and white most often. They paint with their fingers, with simple brushes, sometimes by spraying paint through their mouths. These paintings are the Archaic Period of Ennedi rock art. They are the oldest images we have from the plateau. They show the world the painters saw — a green Sahara, full of wild animals. Why did people in the green Sahara paint on rock walls?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

We do not know for certain. The painters did not leave a written explanation, and the closest living descendants do not always know the specific meanings of paintings made by their ancestors thousands of years ago. But several possible reasons have been suggested. Hunting magic — painting the animals you hope to catch, as a kind of prayer or focus. Storytelling — recording what the group has seen, for those who were not there. Identity marking — saying 'we were here'. Spiritual practice — connecting the painters with the powers behind the animals and the land. Decoration of a special place. Some combination of all of these. Strong answers will see that we cannot collapse rock art into a single explanation. Different paintings probably meant different things to different people. What we can say is that rock art is a very old and very widespread human practice — it appears in caves in France (Lascaux, Chauvet), in Spain (Altamira), in southern Africa (the San), in Australia (Aboriginal rock art), in the Americas, and across the Sahara. Wherever humans have lived in close proximity to rock walls and pigments, they have painted. The urge to make images is one of the oldest human urges. End by noting that this is a useful corrective to thinking of prehistoric people as simple or primitive. The painters of the Ennedi Archaic Period were doing something that humans have done across every continent and many tens of thousands of years. Their painting is part of a very old, very deep human tradition.

2
From about 5,000 years ago, the climate of the Sahara began to change. The reasons are mostly astronomical — the slow wobble of the Earth's axis (the Milankovitch cycles) shifted the path of the African monsoon southwards, away from the Sahara. The rains became less reliable. The dry seasons grew longer. The lakes shrank. The forests retreated. The people of the Ennedi changed too. The wild herds were thinning. Hunting alone was no longer enough. But humans had a new technology — the domestication of cattle. Cattle had been domesticated in Africa and the Near East several thousand years earlier. Now the people of the Sahara began to keep cattle in large numbers, moving with their herds across the still-grassy plains, drinking from the remaining lakes and rivers. This was the Pastoral Period (also called the Bovine Period). The rock art changed completely. The paintings became dominated by cattle. Hundreds, thousands of cattle, painted in herds across the rock walls of the Ennedi. The painters often showed details of breed — the shape of the horns, the colour of the coat, the markings on the back. Some paintings show cattle being milked, cattle being herded, cattle wearing collars or other markings. The people in the paintings change too. They are shown wearing long robes. They carry shepherd's staffs. They dance in groups. Women appear more often, often with elaborate hairstyles. Music appears — the painters depict people playing what may be early harps or lyres. Huts appear, usually shown in cross-section, sometimes with people inside grinding grain or preparing food. The Pastoral Period rock art is a vivid record of a society that was prosperous, settled enough to develop complex social life, and centred on the cattle that gave it its name. The Pastoral Period lasted for two or three thousand years. Most of the famous Ennedi paintings come from this period. What does the Pastoral Period rock art teach us about the people who made it?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

It teaches us that they were a developed pastoral society. The detail in the cattle paintings shows that the painters were intimate with cattle — they knew different breeds, different colours, different ways of caring for cattle. The presence of huts, dances, musical instruments, and shared meals tells us that this was a settled enough society to develop complex culture. The presence of women with elaborate hairstyles tells us that women had a real social role. The variety of paintings across different sites tells us that the Pastoral Sahara was a populated region, with different communities developing different artistic traditions. Strong answers will see that this is very different from the older 'primitive nomad' picture of prehistoric Africa. The Pastoral Saharans were a sophisticated people living in a productive landscape. They had time, materials, and inclination to make art. End by noting that this Pastoral Sahara is one of the surprising discoveries of modern archaeology. For a long time, Western histories assumed that the Sahara had always been desert and that human history in the region had been thin. The rock art shows the opposite — for thousands of years, the Sahara was a centre of human life, with thriving pastoral societies whose descendants spread out as the desert closed in.

3
By about 3,000 years ago, the Sahara had dried much further. The grass that had supported the cattle herds was gone. The lakes that had held permanent water had mostly disappeared. The Pastoral society could not survive in the new desert. Most of the Saharans moved. They went south, to the Sahel and beyond — and many modern West African peoples trace their ancestry partly to the migrations out of the drying Sahara. They went north, to the Mediterranean coast. They went east, to the Nile valley (and some scholars argue that the early dynastic Egyptian civilisation drew partly on Saharan refugees). They concentrated around the few remaining oases and watercourses. But some people stayed. The Ennedi Plateau, with its deep canyons and permanent gueltas, was one of the few places where life could continue. The people who stayed had to adapt to a much harder environment. They could no longer keep cattle. But they had a new animal — the dromedary, the one-humped camel, which had been domesticated in Arabia and was now spreading across North Africa. The camel changed everything. It could carry heavy loads across long distances without water. It could survive on tough thorny plants that cattle could not eat. It made the Sahara, even at its driest, traversable. With camels, the Saharan peoples could trade with the Mediterranean to the north, with West Africa to the south, with the Nile to the east. Long-distance trade routes opened. Salt moved south from Saharan deposits. Gold moved north from West Africa. Slaves, alas, also moved in both directions. The trans-Saharan trade network became one of the most important in the ancient and medieval world. The rock art changed for one final time. The Camel Period paintings show camels in many forms — camels with riders, camels with loads, camels in herds. The riders are often armed — with spears, shields, daggers, sometimes swords. Some paintings show battle scenes — riders in conflict. Some show specific events — what may be raids, weddings, ceremonies. The artistic style becomes more stylised, less naturalistic. The colours often shift to red and white only. Why did the camel change everything?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the camel was the only large domestic animal that could thrive in the new desert. Horses needed too much water. Cattle and sheep needed too much grass. Donkeys were limited in range. The camel could go three weeks without water in moderate conditions. It could carry hundreds of kilograms. It could eat plants that other animals refused. It could be ridden, used as a pack animal, sheared for wool, milked, and eventually slaughtered for meat. Without the camel, the Sahara would have been mostly empty after about 1,000 BCE. With the camel, it became a network. Strong answers will see that single new technologies sometimes transform whole regions. The camel was to the Sahara what the horse was to the American plains or the longbow was to medieval European warfare — a piece of biological technology that reorganised everything around it. End by noting that this is why the Camel Period rock art looks so different from what came before. The painters were no longer recording a green grassland or a pastoral idyll. They were recording a desert network — fast, mobile, sometimes violent, organised around the new animal that had made the desert habitable.

4
The Ennedi rock art tradition continued until at least the 17th century CE. By then, the region had been Islamic for several centuries, and Arabic writing was beginning to replace rock painting as a way of recording events. The painting tradition ended quietly — there is no single date — but the rock art remained on the cliffs. For several centuries, the Ennedi rock art was almost unknown outside the region. The plateau is remote, hard to reach, and far from the main trans-Saharan trade routes. Local people — the Toubou (or Tubu) and other Saharan peoples — knew the painted shelters but did not always know who had made them or when. Some paintings were sacred sites; others were just part of the landscape. Some were used as shelters for herders. Some were ignored. The outside world began to learn about the rock art in the 1930s, when French explorer Burthe d'Annelet brought back the first reports. The major study came in 1956-1957, when Gerard Bailloud, a French archaeologist, recorded more than 500 sites in just a sixth of the plateau area. Subsequent expeditions have added more sites. New sites are still being found. In 2016, UNESCO recognised the Ennedi Plateau as a World Heritage Site, citing both its natural beauty and its cultural value. The Chadian government, working with the international organisation African Parks, has been developing the Ennedi Natural and Cultural Reserve to protect the rock art and the landscape. A team of Chadian archaeologists, led by Guemona Djimet, is now systematically documenting the sites and training younger researchers. The Toubou people who live in the region are increasingly involved in the protection of the heritage that is partly theirs. The rock art faces real threats. Sandstorms and weathering erode the paintings slowly. Animal defecation (from goats, bats, and others) damages some shelters. Tourists, especially those who touch the paintings or take photographs with flash, can cause harm. Most seriously, some people have been pillaging the rock art — cutting chunks of painted sandstone out of the cliff faces to sell to tourists. This is hard to police in such a remote area. What does the Ennedi rock art teach us today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several things at once. First, that climate change is not new. The Sahara was once green. Human civilisations have adapted to climate change before. Some adapted well (developing pastoralism, then camel-based trade); others moved away. The Ennedi rock art records both. Second, that human history in Africa is much longer and richer than European-centred histories sometimes acknowledged. The Pastoral Sahara was a major centre of human life for thousands of years. The rock art is a record of that civilisation. Third, that art and science are not separate. The same paintings that show us beautiful images of cattle are also data about what climate the painters lived in. A pastoralist economy needs grass and water. The presence of cattle paintings tells us the climate could support both. The shift to camels tells us the climate had dried. Rock art is both an aesthetic and a scientific record. Fourth, that the past lives on. The Toubou and other Saharan peoples are descendants of the painters. The land is still inhabited. The history is not over. Strong answers will see that the Ennedi rock art is not just an interesting old thing. It is a window into one of the major climate stories of human history, told by the people who lived through it. End by noting that we are now living through another major climate change — this one largely caused by human activity. The Ennedi rock art is one of the most vivid reminders we have that climate change has happened before, that it has reshaped human societies before, and that the people who survive it are the ones who can adapt. We should look at the Ennedi paintings the way we should look at all good records of the past — as guides to what might come next.

What this object teaches

The Ennedi rock art is a collection of thousands of paintings and engravings on the sandstone walls of the Ennedi Plateau in northeastern Chad. The plateau covers about 40,000 square kilometres and contains over 650 known rock art sites. The art was made by the ancestral peoples of the region over a span of about 7,000 years, from approximately 5,000 BCE to the 17th century CE. Three broad periods are usually identified. The Archaic Period (roughly 5,000-3,000 BCE) shows wild animals — elephants, giraffes, rhinos, ostriches, antelopes — and hunter-gatherer scenes. The Pastoral or Bovine Period (roughly 3,000-1,000 BCE) shows huge numbers of cattle, herders, huts, dances, women with elaborate hairstyles, and musical instruments. The Camel Period (roughly 1,000 BCE to 1700 CE) shows dromedaries, riders, often armed with spears and swords. The three periods together record the drying of the Sahara from grassland to desert. The wild fauna of the Archaic Period required savannah. The cattle herds of the Pastoral Period required reliable grass and water. The camels of the Camel Period thrived in the new desert. The transitions reflect one of the largest climate changes in human history — the Saharan desertification of the last 5,000 years, driven by astronomical shifts in the African monsoon. The paintings were made with mineral pigments (red and yellow ochre, white kaolin, black charcoal) mixed with water or animal fat, applied with fingers, brushes, or by spraying. The engravings were cut into the sandstone with stone or metal tools. The most famous painted shelters are at Manda Gueli, Terkei, Niola Doa, and Wadi Archei. The Ennedi Plateau became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2016 for both its natural and cultural value. The Toubou (Tubu) people and other Saharan peoples are descendants of the painters and continue to live in the region. The Chadian government and African Parks are working together to protect the rock art and the landscape. New sites are still being discovered. The Ennedi rock art is both art and science — a record of a vanished green Sahara and the people who lived in it, painted on rock walls by the people who watched the climate change underneath them.

DateClimate and peopleWhat the rock art shows
about 7000 BCESahara is green savannah; hunter-gatherersEarliest paintings begin (in some areas)
5000-3000 BCEArchaic Period; still wet; hunter-gatherersWild animals — elephants, giraffes, rhinos, antelopes; hunters with bows
3000-1000 BCEPastoral Period; gradual drying; cattle herdersHerds of cattle, huts, dances, women, music, daily life
about 1000 BCESahara now mostly desert; camel arrives from ArabiaTransition; cattle paintings end; camels begin
1000 BCE - 1700 CECamel Period; desert society; trans-Saharan tradeCamels, riders with spears, battle scenes, trade caravans
about 1700 CERock art tradition ends; Islamic writing takes overPaintings stop being made (no exact date)
1930sFirst European reports of the rock artBurthe d'Annelet brings news to the outside world
1956-1957First systematic studyGerard Bailloud records 500+ sites
2016UNESCO World Heritage Site designationInternational protection begins
Key words
Rock art
Images made on natural rock surfaces — either painted (with pigments) or engraved (carved into the stone). Rock art is one of the oldest and most widespread human art forms, found on every inhabited continent. Some rock art is over 40,000 years old (in caves in France, Spain, and Indonesia). Saharan rock art is mostly 5,000 to 12,000 years old.
Example: The Ennedi rock art includes both paintings and engravings. The paintings are usually in red and white pigments on the walls of sandstone caves and shelters. The engravings are cut into the sandstone surface, often outside or in open rock faces. Both kinds were made over thousands of years by the same broad cultural tradition.
Sahara
The largest hot desert in the world, covering about 9 million square kilometres across North Africa. The Sahara today is one of the driest places on Earth. But the Sahara has not always been like this. From about 14,500 to 5,000 years ago, the Sahara was much wetter — known to scientists as the African Humid Period or the Green Sahara. Most of the Ennedi rock art was made during the late Green Sahara and the gradual transition to the modern desert.
Example: The Sahara today receives less than 100 millimetres of rain a year in most places. During the Green Sahara, rainfall was probably 500 to 1,000 millimetres — comparable to modern southern Africa. The Ennedi Plateau, with its rugged terrain and remaining permanent waterholes, was always one of the wetter places in the Sahara, which is why it remained habitable when much of the region became fully desert.
Pastoral Period
The middle phase of Ennedi rock art, roughly 3,000-1,000 BCE, when the dominant subject of the paintings is cattle. Also called the Bovine Period. The Pastoral Saharans were cattle-herding communities living across the still-grassy Sahara. They had relatively settled lifestyles, with huts, organised dances, music, and elaborate dress. Most of the famous Ennedi rock art comes from this period.
Example: A typical Pastoral Period painting at Manda Gueli or Terkei Cave might show several dozen cattle in a single scene, with different colour patterns indicating different breeds. Human figures appear among them — often in long robes, sometimes carrying staffs. The level of detail tells us the painters knew their cattle intimately.
Camel Period
The most recent phase of Ennedi rock art, roughly 1,000 BCE to 1700 CE, when the dominant animal is the dromedary (one-humped camel). The camel had been domesticated in Arabia and reached North Africa by about 1,000 BCE. It transformed life in the now-desert Sahara, making long-distance trade possible. Camel Period paintings often show riders with spears, swords, or shields.
Example: At Manda Gueli, camels are painted directly on top of older cattle paintings — making the climate transition visible on a single rock wall. Camel Period art tends to be more stylised and less naturalistic than Pastoral Period art, often using just red and white pigments and showing camels in galloping postures.
Toubou
The largest indigenous people of the Ennedi region today. Also spelled Tubu, Tibu, or Teda. About 500,000 Toubou live across Chad, Libya, and Niger. They are mostly Muslim and speak the Tubu (Daza-Tedaga) language. They are descendants of the Saharan peoples who made the rock art, especially the later periods.
Example: The Toubou continue to herd camels and goats in the Ennedi region today. Some still live a partly nomadic life. The Toubou are now increasingly involved in protecting the rock art heritage of the plateau, working with the Chadian government and African Parks to document and conserve the painted shelters that are partly their own ancestral record.
Guelta
A permanent natural water pool in a desert, usually formed in a rocky depression where rainwater collects and slow seepage keeps it full. Gueltas are critical to life in the Ennedi. The most famous, Guelta d'Archei, holds permanent water and supports a population of Saharan crocodiles — a remnant of the wetter past, surviving in this one place when crocodiles vanished from most of the Sahara.
Example: The Guelta d'Archei is a deep canyon pool surrounded by sheer sandstone walls, in the southeastern Ennedi. Camels come to drink there every day. The crocodiles in the pool are dwarfs — smaller than crocodiles elsewhere, having adapted to the limited food supply over thousands of years of isolation.
Use this in other subjects
  • Science: Discuss the African Humid Period (about 14,500-5,000 years ago) and the astronomical reasons for the drying of the Sahara — slow shifts in the Earth's axis (Milankovitch cycles) that moved the African monsoon southward. Connect to current climate change, which is faster and human-caused rather than astronomical.
  • Geography: On a map of Africa, mark the Ennedi Plateau (northeastern Chad), the modern Sahara, the Sahel, and the Mediterranean coast. Discuss how the climate zones have shifted southward over the last 5,000 years. The same map looked very different in 5,000 BCE.
  • History: Build a timeline of climate-driven human movement out of the drying Sahara — south to West Africa and the Sahel, east to the Nile valley, north to the Mediterranean. Many modern African and Egyptian populations have ancestry in the green Sahara. The rock art is a record of one of the great population movements in human history.
  • Art: Look at images of Ennedi paintings from the three different periods. Discuss how the style changes — from naturalistic wild animals (Archaic) to detailed pastoral scenes (Bovine) to stylised mounted warriors (Camel). Each period has its own visual language. The same caves were painted over by different generations.
  • Ethics: The Ennedi rock art is threatened by tourist damage, weathering, and pillaging (people cutting paintings out of the rock to sell). Discuss: how do we protect ancient art that belongs to everyone but is found in one specific place? Who has the right to decide? The Chadian government, the Toubou people who live there, UNESCO, or all of these together?
  • Geography: Discuss the role of the gueltas — the permanent water pools — in keeping the Ennedi habitable. The Guelta d'Archei still has crocodiles. Many ancient species and many ancient practices have survived in the Ennedi precisely because the plateau holds water when the surrounding desert does not. Refuges are important in ecological history.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The Sahara has always been a desert.

Right

The Sahara was a green savannah within human memory. From about 14,500 to 5,000 years ago, much of the Sahara was grassland with reliable rains, lakes, and rivers, supporting large populations of humans and wildlife. The desert we know today began to form only about 5,000 years ago and reached its current state about 2,000-3,000 years ago. The rock art of the Ennedi records this transition.

Why

It is easy to assume that the modern landscape is the way things have always been. The Sahara is a vivid reminder that climate has changed dramatically within human history.

Wrong

Rock art was made by 'primitive' people.

Right

Rock art was made by humans culturally identical to us. The painters of the Ennedi Archaic Period had the same brain, language, social organisation, and creative capacities as any modern human. The Pastoral Period art shows a sophisticated society with complex social life. Calling rock-art-makers 'primitive' confuses technological simplicity with cultural simplicity — they are not the same thing.

Why

'Primitive' is a loaded word that often hides assumptions about progress and hierarchy. The Saharan painters were skilled artists, careful observers, and members of complex pastoral societies. Their art is not less than ours; it is different.

Wrong

The Ennedi rock art is all from one period.

Right

The Ennedi rock art spans about 7,000 years and shows three distinct periods (Archaic, Pastoral, Camel) reflecting three different ways of life under three different climates. The art is not a single object but a continuous tradition that changed as the people and the environment changed.

Why

It is common to think of 'cave painting' as a single thing. The reality is that rock art traditions usually span thousands of years, with multiple styles, multiple meanings, and multiple periods. The Ennedi is one of the clearest examples.

Wrong

The painters of the Ennedi rock art are all gone.

Right

The Toubou (Tubu) and other Saharan peoples are descendants of the rock art makers and continue to live in the Ennedi region today. About 500,000 Toubou live across Chad, Libya, and Niger. They are not the same people as the Archaic Period painters — 7,000 years is a long time — but they have continuous cultural and ancestral roots in the region. The Ennedi is not an abandoned place.

Why

It is easy to think of ancient rock art sites as deserted ruins. In fact, many — including the Ennedi — are in landscapes that have been continuously inhabited and where the descendants of the artists still live.

Teaching this with care

Treat the Ennedi rock art and the Toubou people with the seriousness they deserve. The Saharan peoples are living communities, not museum exhibits or romantic nomads. Pronounce 'Ennedi' as 'EN-eh-dee'. Pronounce 'Toubou' as 'TOO-boo' (also acceptable: 'Tubu' /TOO-boo/, 'Teda' /TEH-da/, 'Tibu' /TEE-boo/). Pronounce 'Manda Gueli' as 'MAN-da GWEH-lee'. Pronounce 'Terkei' as 'TER-kay'. Pronounce 'guelta' as 'GEL-tah'. Pronounce 'wadi' as 'WAH-dee'. Pronounce 'Sahara' as 'sa-HAH-rah'. Pronounce 'Sahel' as 'sa-HEL'. Pronounce 'dromedary' as 'DROM-uh-dair-ee'. Pronounce 'Bovine' as 'BOH-vine'. Be honest about the climate history. The Green Sahara was a real period; the drying was a real climate change driven by real astronomical mechanisms. The lesson should not treat this as speculation or as a metaphor. Modern climate science has confirmed the Green Sahara hypothesis from multiple lines of evidence (lake sediments, pollen records, dust cores, archaeological remains). Be respectful when discussing 'primitive' peoples. The lesson is explicit that the rock-art-makers were not primitive in any meaningful sense. Teachers should avoid language that suggests prehistoric peoples were less than modern humans. They were less technologically equipped but not less intelligent, creative, or socially complex. Be careful with the Chad context. Chad has been through serious modern conflict — several civil wars since 1965, the 'Toyota War' against Libya in 1987 (one of the most dramatic asymmetric military campaigns of the late 20th century), and continued instability in some regions. The Ennedi region itself is now relatively peaceful but is near borders that have seen conflict. Mention the modern context honestly without dwelling on it. Be respectful of the Toubou. They are a real living people, with their own language (Tubu, also called Daza-Tedaga), religion (mostly Muslim), and culture. They have not always had easy relations with the Chadian government or with neighbouring peoples. Treat them as agents in their own story, not as background characters in 'the rock art story'. Be honest about the threats. The rock art is genuinely at risk from weathering, tourist damage, and (in some cases) deliberate pillaging — chunks of painted sandstone cut from cliff faces to sell. Mention this without alarmism. The Chadian government and African Parks are working on protection. Be careful about the comparison to modern climate change. The Saharan desertification took thousands of years and was driven by astronomical mechanisms. Modern human-caused climate change is much faster and has different mechanisms. The Ennedi rock art is a useful reminder that climate has changed before, but it is not an exact precedent for what is happening now. Make this clear. If you have students with Chadian, Saharan, or wider West African heritage, give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Many West African families have stories of long migrations whose deeper context is the drying Sahara. End the lesson on the present. The Toubou are still living in the Ennedi. The Chadian government and African Parks are working on conservation. New sites are still being found. The story is not closed.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Ennedi rock art.

  1. What is the Ennedi rock art, and where is it?

    The Ennedi rock art is a collection of thousands of paintings and engravings on the sandstone walls of the Ennedi Plateau, a 40,000 square kilometre sandstone massif in northeastern Chad. It was made over about 7,000 years by the ancestral peoples of the region. There are over 650 known sites, and the plateau became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2016.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the basic description (rock paintings and engravings) and the location (Ennedi Plateau, Chad).
  2. What are the three main periods of Ennedi rock art, and what does each show?

    The Archaic Period (roughly 5,000-3,000 BCE) shows wild animals — elephants, giraffes, rhinos, antelopes — and hunter-gatherers. The Pastoral or Bovine Period (roughly 3,000-1,000 BCE) shows cattle herders, with huts, dances, and daily life. The Camel Period (roughly 1,000 BCE to 1700 CE) shows camels and riders, often armed. Each period reflects a different way of life under a different climate.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name all three periods and what each shows. Naming any two with the right framing earns most marks.
  3. How does the Ennedi rock art record climate change?

    The three periods of art correspond to three different climates. The Archaic Period wild animals required green savannah. The Pastoral cattle herds required reliable grass and water. The Camel Period dromedaries thrived in desert conditions. The shift from one period to the next records the drying of the Sahara from grassland to desert over about 5,000 years.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that connects the three periods to climate change (from grassland to desert) and gives at least one specific example.
  4. Why did the camel transform life in the Sahara?

    The camel was the only large domestic animal that could thrive in the new desert. It could go three weeks without water, carry hundreds of kilograms, and eat plants that other animals refused. It made long-distance trade across the Sahara possible, opening trans-Saharan trade routes for salt, gold, and other goods.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the biological capacity of the camel (water, load, food) and its role in opening trade. Either alone earns most marks.
  5. Are the descendants of the rock-art-makers still alive?

    Yes. The Toubou (also called Tubu, Teda, or Tibu) people are descendants of the Saharan rock-art-makers. About 500,000 Toubou live today across Chad, Libya, and Niger. They are mostly Muslim, speak the Tubu language, and continue to herd camels and goats in the Ennedi region. They are increasingly involved in protecting the rock art heritage.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that names the Toubou (or Tubu) and confirms that they live in the region today.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Ennedi rock art is both art and science — beautiful images and a record of climate change. What does this teach us about how we read the past?

    This is a question about how we know what we know. Strong answers will see that the same physical objects can carry many kinds of information, depending on how we look at them. A painting of cattle is art — it has aesthetic qualities, style, composition, a maker. It is also data — it tells us cattle were present in the landscape at the time it was painted, which tells us the climate could support cattle. The painter did not intend to record climate; that was simply a side-effect of recording what they saw. But we can read both purposes today, because both information layers are present. Strong answers will see that this is true of many historical records. A medieval painting of a meal tells us about art, about religion, about what people ate, about how kitchens worked, about social organisation. A nineteenth-century photograph of a street tells us about photography, about clothing, about urban design, about social class. End by saying that learning to read multiple layers of meaning from a single source is one of the most important skills of historical understanding. The Ennedi rock art is a particularly clear example because the layers — art and climate science — are so distinct.
  2. The Sahara dried out over thousands of years, and the people who lived there had to adapt. We are now living through a much faster climate change. What can the Ennedi story teach us about adaptation?

    This is a question about historical analogy. Strong answers will see that the analogy is partial. The Saharan desertification was slow (thousands of years), driven by astronomical mechanisms, and gave the populations many generations to adapt. Modern climate change is faster (decades to a century), driven by human activity, and is giving us much less time. The Saharan peoples adapted in several ways — they developed new technologies (cattle pastoralism, then camel pastoralism), they moved (south, north, east), and some stayed in refuges like the Ennedi where life was still possible. Strong answers will see that all three responses — innovation, migration, and refuge-finding — are likely to be part of the modern human response too, though on much faster timescales. End by noting that historical analogies do not predict outcomes; they suggest possibilities. The Saharan story tells us that human societies can adapt to large climate changes. It does not tell us whether modern adaptation will be peaceful, just, or successful. Those are still in the making.
  3. Some Ennedi rock art sites are being damaged by tourists, weathering, and people pillaging paintings to sell. How should we protect ancient art that belongs to all humanity but is found in a specific place?

    This is a question about heritage governance. Strong answers will see that there is no simple answer. The Ennedi rock art exists in Chad; the Chadian government has formal authority over it. The Toubou and other local peoples are the cultural descendants of the makers and live with the rock art every day. UNESCO and the international community have declared the site of global value. Tourists from many countries visit. African Parks (an international NGO) helps manage the reserve. All these stakeholders have legitimate interests. The honest task is to balance them. The local community must be central — they live there and they are the cultural heirs. The Chadian government provides legal protection and security. UNESCO and international organisations provide expertise and funding. Tourists should be welcomed but managed carefully. Pillaging must be stopped through both policing and reducing demand. Strong answers will see that this is the same set of questions raised by many heritage sites worldwide — from the Pyramids of Egypt to the Great Wall of China to Stonehenge. There is no universal answer, only ongoing negotiation between communities, governments, and the international community. End by noting that the Ennedi is in some ways well-positioned — the descendants of the painters live there, the Chadian government is engaged, UNESCO has recognised it, and African Parks is actively managing it. The threats are real but the protection systems are real too.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Show a picture of the Sahara today. Ask: 'Has it always looked like this?' Most students will say yes. Then say: 'Within human memory — within the last 7,000 years — the Sahara was green grassland with lakes, rivers, elephants, giraffes, and large human populations. We know this because the people who lived there painted what they saw on rock walls. Today we are going to learn how to read those paintings.'
  2. THE GREEN SAHARA (10 min)
    Tell the story of the African Humid Period (about 14,500-5,000 years ago) and the gradual drying of the Sahara. Connect to the Milankovitch cycles and the southward shift of the African monsoon. The drying was real and slow — thousands of years. The Ennedi rock art was made during the late Green Sahara and the gradual transition to the modern desert.
  3. THE THREE PERIODS (15 min)
    On the board, draw three columns — Archaic, Pastoral, Camel. Under each, describe what the rock art shows. Archaic: wild animals (elephants, giraffes, antelopes), hunter-gatherers, savannah climate. Pastoral: cattle herds, huts, dances, music, women with elaborate hairstyles, still-grassy climate. Camel: dromedaries, riders with spears, trade caravans, desert climate. The shift from one to the next is the shift in the land underneath them.
  4. WHO MADE IT, AND WHO IS THERE NOW (10 min)
    Talk about the descendants of the painters. The Toubou and other Saharan peoples are the cultural heirs of the rock-art-makers. About 500,000 Toubou live today across Chad, Libya, and Niger. They herd camels and goats. They speak the Tubu language. They are now involved in protecting the rock art heritage that is partly their own. The Ennedi Plateau is a UNESCO World Heritage Site (since 2016) and a Natural and Cultural Reserve, managed by the Chadian government with African Parks.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What can a 5,000-year-old painting of cattle teach a scientist today?' Take answers. End by saying: 'The painters of the Ennedi did not know they were leaving us a climate record. They were recording what they saw — the cattle they lived with, the dances they danced, the camels that replaced the cattle when the grass disappeared. Five thousand years later, we read their paintings and learn what the Sahara was like before it was a desert. The rock art is art, history, and science all at once. We are now living through another climate change, faster and human-caused. The Ennedi paintings are not a recipe for what to do — but they are a reminder that climate has changed before, that humans have adapted before, and that the records of the past can teach us what kind of change is possible.'
Classroom materials
Read the Painting
Instructions: Show students a single image of an Ennedi rock painting that contains multiple layers — for example, camels painted over cattle, or a hunter painted next to giraffes. Ask them to identify (a) what they see, (b) what period they think each layer belongs to, and (c) what each layer tells us about the climate at the time it was painted. Discuss in small groups.
Example: In Mr Adoum's class, students looked at an image of the Manda Gueli paintings. The teacher said: 'You have just done what archaeologists do. By looking at a single rock wall, you can read two or three different periods of climate and life. The cattle on the bottom needed grass. The camels on top needed less grass and more endurance. The painters did not know they were leaving us a record. They were just painting what they lived with. We can read both layers because both are still there.'
Mineral Pigment Workshop
Instructions: Bring small samples of natural earth pigments to class — red ochre, yellow ochre, white clay, charcoal. (Available cheaply from art supply shops, or simply collected — red clay from a garden, charcoal from a fire, white chalk.) Have students mix small amounts with water and paint a simple animal on a piece of stone (or thick paper). Discuss: this is what the Ennedi painters used. The same pigments. The same techniques.
Example: In Ms Dauda's class, every student made a small mineral-pigment painting on a flat stone. The teacher said: 'You have just used the same materials and almost the same techniques as the Ennedi painters. Red ochre and white clay are what they used. The result is small and rough — but it is real. Imagine doing this on a cliff face with no electric light, no manufactured brushes, no reference images, working from memory and observation. The Ennedi painters were skilled. You have just had a tiny taste of what they did.'
Climate Adaptation
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'If the climate where you live changed dramatically — say, became much drier — what would your community have to do?' Brainstorm: change crops, change water systems, move, develop new technologies, change diets. Compare with what the Saharan peoples did — developed cattle pastoralism, then camel pastoralism, then trans-Saharan trade.
Example: In one class, students suggested moving to higher ground, building rainwater tanks, switching to drought-tolerant crops, and developing solar-powered water systems. The teacher said: 'You have just listed several of the same responses humans have made to climate change throughout history. The Saharan peoples developed pastoralism. The camel was their new technology. Modern technologies will be different. But the basic challenges — finding water, finding food, sometimes moving — are the same. Climate change is not new. Humans have done this before. The Ennedi rock art is one of our oldest records of doing it.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Tuareg sandal for another Saharan tradition with deep roots in the trans-Saharan trade.
  • Try a lesson on the boomerang for another deep prehistoric object connected with hunter-gatherer life.
  • Try a lesson on the seed bank for another way of preserving the deep past of human-environment relationships.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the Green Sahara and its desertification. The story spans the period from about 14,500 BCE to 1,500 BCE and is one of the major climate events of human history.
  • Connect this lesson to science class with a longer project on Milankovitch cycles, the African monsoon, and the deep-time climate record. The Ennedi rock art is one specific record of one specific climate change.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on rock art around the world — Lascaux and Chauvet in France, Altamira in Spain, the San paintings of southern Africa, Aboriginal rock art in Australia, the pictographs of the American Southwest. Different traditions, different ages, similar urges.
Key takeaways
  • The Ennedi rock art is thousands of paintings and engravings on the sandstone walls of the Ennedi Plateau in northeastern Chad. Made over about 7,000 years by the ancestral peoples of the region, it covers over 650 known sites and became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2016.
  • The art shows three main periods. The Archaic Period (roughly 5,000-3,000 BCE) shows wild animals and hunter-gatherers. The Pastoral Period (roughly 3,000-1,000 BCE) shows cattle herds, huts, dances, and daily life. The Camel Period (roughly 1,000 BCE to 1700 CE) shows dromedaries and armed riders.
  • The three periods record the drying of the Sahara from green savannah to modern desert. The wild fauna of the Archaic Period required savannah; the cattle of the Pastoral Period required reliable grass; the camels of the Camel Period thrived in desert. The transitions tell us how the climate changed.
  • The Saharan desertification was real and slow — driven by astronomical shifts (the Milankovitch cycles) that moved the African monsoon southward. It took thousands of years. The Ennedi rock art is one of the most vivid records of this change anywhere in the world.
  • The camel transformed life in the post-pastoral Sahara. It made long-distance trade possible, opening the trans-Saharan routes that connected West Africa, North Africa, and the Mediterranean for over two thousand years.
  • The Toubou (Tubu) and other Saharan peoples are descendants of the rock-art-makers and continue to live in the Ennedi region today. About 500,000 Toubou live across Chad, Libya, and Niger. They are increasingly involved in protecting the rock art heritage that is partly their own.
Sources
  • Ennedi Massif — UNESCO World Heritage Centre (2024) [institution]
  • Chad - African Rock Art — British Museum (2024) [institution]
  • The Rock Art of the Ennedi (Chad) — Gerard Bailloud (1997) [academic]
  • Unearthing Ennedi's Cultural Heritage — African Parks (2024) [institution]
  • The Sahara: A Cultural History — Eamonn Gearon (2011) [book]