Experts suggest that once these peoples developed agriculture, they were able to produce more food than they could by hunting and gathering. As a result the population in West Africa increase. Because this enlarged population required more food, the earliest Bantu speakers planted more land, and soon there Wasn't enough land to go around. They couldn't go north in search of land because the area was densely populated and the Sahar was slowly advancing toward them. So the people moved southward.
The Bantu migrations begain West africa about 3000 years ago.
The development of agriculture
They study the Bantu Migrations through older maps of migration routes.
The Bantu migrations were a series of movements of the Bantu peoples from their homeland in West Africa to other parts of the continent, spreading their language and culture. These migrations played a significant role in shaping the linguistic and cultural landscape of sub-Saharan Africa.
The Bantu migrations occurred due to population growth, search for new agricultural land, and desire for trade opportunities. The Bantu people moved across Africa, spreading their language and culture, which led to the diffusion and diversity of Bantu societies.
The Bantu no longer migrate to South Africa and Zimbabwe.
The Bantu language is spoken in many parts of Africa.
Trade
Hunting and gathering were the main special skills that the Bantu had and they carried with them in their migrations. Other skills included sailing as well as farming.
No, the Bantu migrations and the Columbian Exchange are two distinct historical events. The Bantu migrations refer to the spread of Bantu-speaking peoples across Africa, while the Columbian Exchange was the transfer of plants, animals, and diseases between the Old and New Worlds following Christopher Columbus's voyages to the Americas.
Iron Tools and Population of Growth
Poverty, starvation and a need to live better.