Alma Mekondjo Nankela
Alma Mekondjo Nankela is a quaternary and prehistorian specialist at the National Heritage Council of Namibia. She is responsible for the development of heritage policies and programmes while overseeing the integration and compliances of 1972 UNESCO Conventions and other internationally recognized laws into Namibia’s national heritage resources policies. Nankela advises the Council on appropriate measures towards research, conservation, management and promotion of Namibia's heritage resources. She works closely with local communities in order to strengthens, encourages and promotes their involvement in the overall preservation and management of cultural heritage properties. Nankela liaise and collaborates with regional, international heritage professionals and other bodies relating to the scientific research across Namibia.
Alma Mekondjo Nankela | |
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Born | Kwanza-Sul, Angola[1] |
Alma mater |
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Scientific career | |
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Institutions | |
Thesis | Rock Art and Landscape: An empirical analysis in the content, context and distribution of the rock art sites in Omandumba East and West, Erongo Region-Namibia (2017) |
Doctoral advisor |
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Early life and education
Nankela was born in exile in Kwanza-Sul, Angola, during Namibia's liberation struggle.[1] She has six siblings. She was raised in northern Namibia by her parents Penda Nankela, a retired physician from Outapi District Hospital and her mother Maria Hamulo, a clinical pathologist from Namibia Institute of Pathology (NIP) in Oshakati. Her mother worked alongside Nickey Iyambo at Cambuta Health Centre in Cuanza-sul.[1]
Nankela completed her primary school at Oshakati Combined School in 1999 and later attended high school at Okalongo Secondary School majoring in history and geography. She then pursued a bachelor's degree in History and Geography from the University of Namibia and thereafter taught history and development studies at Delta Secondary School Windhoek. She earned a joint master’s degrees in quaternary & prehistory from the University of Ferrara and the Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle de Paris in 2011, and in 2017 obtained a double titled PhD in quaternary & prehistory through the Erasmus Mundus joint study programs, in France and Italy.[4]
Awards and accomplishments
Her most notable discovery to date has been the April 2008 find of a 16th century Portuguese shipwreck in Oranjemund.[5]
In 2013, Nankela secured funding of U$10,000 American Ambassador’s Fund for Cultural Preservation (AFCP) through the American Embassy in Windhoek, towards the restoration of the Spitzkoppe heritage sites in Erongo region.https://na.usembassy.gov/education-culture/ambassador-fund-cultural-preservation/
In 2014, Nankela secured European Union funding for the scientific research of archaeological heritage in Erongo Mountains, Namibia.https://sites.google.com/a/unife.it/idqp/
In 2016, Nankela was runner up for researcher of the year by the National Commission on Research, Science and Technology of Namibia.[6]
in 2017, she founded her small consulting company called 'Welwitschia Archaeological Heritage Solutions cc', which operates on part-time basis
Committee
Nankela serves as the Chairperson for the Namibia National Committee for Human Remains in the Ministry of Education, Arts and Culture Namibia. The committee is responsible for the review of Namibia’s current practices for claiming and repatriation of human remains (and associated objects) and heritage objects of Namibian origin held in foreign institutions as well as the development of comprehensive set of national guidelines and a national policy for the handling and managing the remains and heritage objects in Namibia.
Professional associations
Nankela is a professional member of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) https://www.icomos.org/fr/ the Associations of Southern African Professional Archaeologists (ASAPA) http://asapa.co.za/ and the Namibia Scientific Society (NSS) http://www.namscience.com.na/
Selected works
- 2020. Calcium oxalate radiocarbon dating: preliminary tests to date rock art of decorated open-air caves of Erongo Mountains in Namibia.Cambridge University Press. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/radiocarbon/article/abs/calcium-oxalate-radiocarbon-dating-preliminary-tests-to-date-rock-art-of-the-decorated-openair-caves-erongo-mountains-namibia/8F368D23986E0AE6C45F65197F6055F1
- 2020. Rock art in Namibia.Encyclopedia of global archaeology. http://link-springer-com-443.webvpn.fjmu.edu.cn/referenceworkentry/10.1007%2F978-3-030-30018-0_3429
- 2017. Rock art and Landscape: an empirical Analysis in the content, context and distribution of the rock art sites in Omandumba East and West, Erongo Region-Namibia. PhD Thesis, Paris, Muséum national d'histoire naturelle en cotutelle.[7]
- 2016. Alma Nankela and Helke Mocke. "Fossil Freshwater Molluscs from Simanya in the Kalahari System, Northern Namibia", 'Communications of the Geological Survey of Namibia 17, p. 66-84.https://www.academia.edu/25575341/Fossil_Freshwater_Molluscs_from_Simanya_in_the_Kalahari_System_Northern_Namibia
- 2016. Style, techniques and graphic expression of Omandumba Rock Art Sites in Erongo Mountain, Namibia.publication description. British Archaeological Reports S2787.
- 2015. Rock art of Omandumba Farms in Erongo Mountain, Namibia.ATELIER Etno. https://www.academia.edu/23962103/Rock_art_when_why_and_to_whom_Rock_Art_of_Omandumba_Farm_in_Erongo_Mountain_Namibia2015. Rock Art Research in Namibia: a Synopsis." Africana Studia, Vol. 24 Issue 1, p. 39-56. https://www.africabib.org/rec.php?RID=A00003831
- 2014. Rock Art and cultural Identity formation in Namibia: reference to Twyfelfontein world heritage site. In Identities and Diversities: Ethnicity and Gender, edited by Lins, et alii, pp. 143-174.
- 2012. The Landscape Setting of the Rock Arts Sites in Kunene Region, Namibia." In Landscape within rock art, edited by L. Oosterbeek and G. Nash. Centro de Pré-Historia do Instituto Politécnico (CEIPHAR), Tomar.
References
- Solomons, Jonathan (2015-10-20). "From Refugee to Leading Female Archaeologist". The Namibian. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- Mekondjo Nankela, Alma (2017-03-23). "Rock Art research in Namibia: a Synopsis". Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- "Rock Art and Landscape: An empirical analysis in the content, context and distribution of the rock art sites in Omandumba East and West, Erongo Region-Namibia". 2017-03-23. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- Mungoba, Tunohole. "For the Love of Heritage". Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- Neill, Peter; ContributorDirector; Observatory, World Ocean (2013-11-19). "The Oranjemund Shipwreck". HuffPost. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- "National Commission on Research, Science and Technology Report 2016" (PDF). Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- Nankela, Alma Mekondjo (2017-03-23). Rock art and Landscape : an empirical Analysis in the content, context and distribution of the rock art sites in Omandumba East and West, Erongo Region-Namibia (Thesis).