On the high plains and rolling mounds between Nakuru and Laikipia, a quiet pastoral horizon appears in the archaeological record in the late second and early first millennium BCE. Excavations at named localities — Deloraine Farm (GqJh6), Kasiole 2 (GvJh54), Kisima Farm (KFR-C4), Ilkek Mounds (GsJj66) and a Laikipia District burial (GoJl45) — reveal burial contexts and material traces consistent with mobile herding lifeways. Radiocarbon-calibrated contexts from the sampled individuals fall between 1296 and 950 BCE, situating these people within Kenya’s Iron Age pastoral transformations.
Archaeological data indicates a landscape of temporary settlements, livestock management, and funerary mounds rather than dense sedentary villages. Material culture recovered with burials is sparse but consistent with pastoral use of space: isolated grave offerings, traces of domesticates in faunal assemblages, and features interpreted as ephemeral corrals or kraals. Limited evidence suggests connections of these groups to broader East African pastoral networks, likely involving livestock movement across the Rift Valley.
Because only five individuals have yielded genetic data, any narrative of origin must remain tentative. Still, the combined archaeological footprint and the uniparental signals offer a first, evocative glimpse of early Iron Age pastoral communities in central Kenya.