Inventory Online

Inventory 2125

Three-legged standing vessel

Mounted on wooden plate and glued afterwards.

Dimensions: 33,5 cm high; 10,5 cm in circumference

Manufacturer: unknown

Geographical origin: Namibia

Collector: Werner Denzel, in the collection as a donation since 2010. Werner Denzel (*11.01.1904 - ?) arrived in 1930 in what is now Namibia.

 

He worked as a printer and typesetter in Otjiwarongo.

His collection was handed over to the DITSL by his nephew in 2010. Nothing more is known about the exact circumstances of the acquisition of the objects

 

Inventory 2131

horn, probably beef

inventory number: 2131

About 39 cm long, 8 cm wide.

Geographical origin: Namibia

Provenance: Werner Denzel, in the collection as a donation since 2010. Werner Denzel (*11.01.1904 - date and place of death unknown) arrived in 1930 in what is now Namibia.

He worked as a printer and typesetter in Otjiwarongo.

The object was handed over to the DITSL by his nephew in 2010. The exact circumstances of the acquisition of the objects are not yet known.

 

 

 

 

Inventory 1719 

consisting of 36 insect cones

65 cm long, 5,5 cm wide

Geographical origin: Namibia

Provenance: The object was acquired between 1954 and 1990 by Oswin Köhler during his field research with the Kxoé in southern Africa. He gave the object to Horst Dintelmann in gratitude for the financial support of his field research. Dintelmann handed over the property to the DITSL in 2009.

 

 

Subcategories

Rangeland-based livestock production is a major land use system that contributes between 15 and 60 percent of the agricultural GDP in eastern and southern African countries. The growth of rangeland vegetation is highly variable in space and time, occurring in temporary patches. 

Knowledge of rangelands is crucial to their management and strategic use of resources. Local communities have developed strategies that are grounded in cultural practices, stories, ethics, and norms specific to their area. These strategies also require access to up-to-date information on heterogenous and seasonal resource availability.

However, site-specific information on the condition and intensity of use of rangeland resources is rarely available or accessible to herders in real-time. Consequently, incomplete or outdated information is often the basis on which pastoralists make decisions. 

Information and communication technologies (ICT) have enormous potential to provide easily accessible up-to-date information to increase efficiency based on spatial data generation, telemetry services, GPS navigation services, and mobile phone network services, reliably facilitated by an ever-growing system of private and public satellites. 

To successfully co-develop technology, InfoRange uses a transdisciplinary approach to create the ICT solutions together with users in a way that embeds them in social innovations. Through  an actor- and activity-oriented approach, we build on the knowledge of different involved actor groups to understand how their decision-making can be improved through ICT.

Linking digital solutions to the existing system offers opportunities for the community to improve their information gathering and sharing and make it more effective. In addition, digitization can facilitate communication between various stakeholders, such as veterinarians, authorities regulating water supply in pasture areas, or government agencies involved in other pastoral services.