4.8 Article

Environmental impact of geometric earthwork construction in pre-Columbian Amazonia

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1321770111

Keywords

paleoecology; Amazonian archaeology; human-environment interactions; Anthropocene; Amazon rainforest

Funding

  1. Leverhulme Trust [F/00158/Ch]
  2. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) [NE/152830X/1]
  3. University of Edinburgh

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There is considerable controversy over whether pre-Columbian (pre-A. D. 1492) Amazonia was largely pristine and sparsely populated by slash-and-burn agriculturists, or instead a densely populated, domesticated landscape, heavily altered by extensive deforestation and anthropogenic burning. The discovery of hundreds of large geometric earthworks beneath intact rainforest across southern Amazonia challenges its status as a pristine landscape, and has been assumed to indicate extensive pre-Columbian deforestation by large populations. We tested these assumptions using coupled local-and regional-scale paleoecological records to reconstruct land use on an earthwork site in northeast Bolivia within the context of regional, climate-driven biome changes. This approach revealed evidence for an alternative scenario of Amazonian land use, which did not necessitate labor-intensive rainforest clearance for earthwork construction. Instead, we show that the inhabitants exploited a naturally open savanna landscape that they maintained around their settlement despite the climatically driven rainforest expansion that began similar to 2,000 y ago across the region. Earthwork construction and agriculture on terra firme landscapes currently occupied by the seasonal rainforests of southern Amazonia may therefore not have necessitated large-scale deforestation using stone tools. This finding implies far less labor-and potentially lower population densitythan previously supposed. Our findings demonstrate that current debates over themagnitude and nature of pre-Columbian Amazonian land use, and its impact on global biogeochemical cycling, are potentially flawed because they do not consider this land use in the context of climate-driven forest-savanna biome shifts through the mid-to-late Holocene.

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