@Garaad diinle there is a huge derelict of duty when it comes to Somali Studies, and even the Horn in general. Its like they intentionally refrained from studying anything to do with the ancient period or only touched on it briefly with small archaeological expeditions, yet we have now amateurs digging up entire ruined cities and priceless artefacts. Are you telling me those guys in the sixties or seventies with all their equipment and teams missed all of that and more?
This sort of derelict of duty would have seen the Scandinavian runes pigeonholed as a lost writing system even do with research we now know it was still used as late as the 19th century. Seeing as writing was used in most societies by just a small group that would consist of maybe 1%, usually a political or religious class, it means it only takes one shift in a school of thought or a dynasty change for that writing system to disappear over time.
The amount of questions that would be answered if they approached Somali history with an open mind and combined with a multi-disciplinary approach (archaeology, writing, genetics, etc) is just ridiculous.