Between ~14,800 and 5,500 years ago the Sahara was green — savanna, rivers, lakes, and home to tens of thousands of pastoralists. When the African Humid Period ended abruptly, these populations followed shrinking watercourses northeast along documented paleorivers (Tamanrasset → Kufra) toward the only permanent water left: the Nile.This hypothesis proposes that these Saharan groups — carrying the ancient North African genetic lineage first documented at Taforalt (15,000 BP) and recently confirmed through Takarkori (7,000 BP) — transmitted a sophisticated symbolic and ritual package that became foundational to Predynastic Egypt and A-Group/Kerma Nubia. Central elements include: the concentric-ring + teardrop geometry of the Eye of Horus (Wedjat), already visible in the landscape of the Richat Structure (“Eye of the Sahara”) and carved at Messak Settafet ~6,000–4,000 BCE cattle cosmograms built in thousands of skulls at Kerma (~2,500–1,500 BCE) the protective “First Time” (Zep Tepi) cosmology describing a western mound encircled by stone rings rising from water Supporting lines of evidence converge on a ~4,000–3,700 BCE corridor movement: published ancient DNA continuity (Taforalt → Takarkori) dairying, dung fuel, S-twist textiles, pearl millet/sorghum/weed dispersal isotopic dust signature shift in Nile sediments authenticated ancient Brucella & M. tuberculosis gradient (west → east, oldest → youngest) abrupt appearance of royal iconography (White Crown, Horus falcon) in Nubia before Egypt unifies The model generates explicit, low-cost, falsifiable tests using existing museum collections (A-Group aDNA, Richat lithology matching, cattle/crop/isotope continuity). If confirmed, it reframes Egyptian sacred symbolism not as sudden invention but as cultural memory carried across 3,000 km and ~3,000 years. If refuted, the pattern dissolves.All data and code for the novel pathogen screen are reproducible from public SRA accessions. The full 25-field synthesis, predictions, and supplementary authentication tables are openly available.
Sefy Levy (Mon,) studied this question.