2015
DOI: 10.1177/0959683615581204
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Pre-Columbian land use in the ring-ditch region of the Bolivian Amazon

Abstract: The nature and extent of pre-Columbian (pre-1492 AD) human impact in Amazonia is a contentious issue. The Bolivian Amazon has yielded some of the most impressive evidence for large and complex pre-Columbian societies in the Amazon basin, yet there remains relatively little data concerning the land use of these societies over time. Palaeoecology, when integrated with archaeological data, has the potential to fill these gaps in our knowledge. We present a 6,000-year record of anthropogenic burning, agriculture a… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…In the Colombian savannas, Behling and Hooghiemstra (2000) attributed a marked increase of palm pollen at c. 3800 b2k (under the wettest Holocene climate regime) to human activities. In Bolivia, the first occurrence of maize pollen (a key crop for the region in pre-Columbian times) was taken as an indication of the start of agriculture: at c. 6500 b2k in the sediments of the Llanos de Moxos in the lowlands of northern Bolivia (Brugger et al, 2016), and at c. 2500 b2k in the Bolivian Amazon (Carson et al, 2015).…”
Section: Americasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Colombian savannas, Behling and Hooghiemstra (2000) attributed a marked increase of palm pollen at c. 3800 b2k (under the wettest Holocene climate regime) to human activities. In Bolivia, the first occurrence of maize pollen (a key crop for the region in pre-Columbian times) was taken as an indication of the start of agriculture: at c. 6500 b2k in the sediments of the Llanos de Moxos in the lowlands of northern Bolivia (Brugger et al, 2016), and at c. 2500 b2k in the Bolivian Amazon (Carson et al, 2015).…”
Section: Americasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Human disturbances of rainforest settings are routinely described via analysis of fossil pollen (Bush et al, 1989;Carson et al, 2015), diatoms (Yacobaccio & Morales, 2005;Urrutia et al, 2010), and charcoal (McMichael et al, 2012a). Because these proxy analyses are so time-intensive, the resulting datasets are generally resolved at centennial to decadal intervals.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Was bamboo forest also dominant before the geoglyphs, as some have suggested (36)(37)(38)? Or did people exploit and maintain a more open landscape afforded by dryer climatic conditions of the mid-Holocene (8000-4000 BP) (39), as recently found to be the case for pre-Columbian earthworks <1,000 y old in the forest-savanna ecotone of northeast Bolivia (26,40)? (ii) What was the extent of environmental impact associated with geoglyph construction?…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%