MELBOURNE, FLA. —A paper published this week in Science
provides the most nuanced view to date of the small, shifting human
populations in much of the Amazon before the arrival of Europeans. The
research, which includes the first landscape-scale
sampling of central and western Amazonia, finds that early inhabitants
were concentrated near rivers and lakes but actually had little
long-term impact on the outlying forests, as if they merely tiptoed
around the land far from natural sources of water. In
doing so, the new study overturns the currently popular idea that the
Amazon was a cultural parkland in pre-Columbian times.
The Amazon Basin is one of Earth’s areas of highest biodiversity.
Therefore, understanding how Amazonia was modified by humans in the past
is important for conservation and understanding the ecological
processes of tropical rainforests.
Researchers, at Florida Institute of Technology, the Smithsonian
Institution, Wake Forest University and the University of Florida looked
at how widespread human impacts were in Amazonia before the Europeans
arrived. If the Pre-Columbian Amazon was a highly
altered landscape, then most of the Amazon’s current biodiversity could
have come from human effects.
The research team, led by Florida Tech’s Crystal McMichael and Mark
Bush, retrieved 247 soil cores from 55 locations throughout the central
and western Amazon, sampling sites that were likely disturbed by humans,
like river banks and areas known from archeological
evidence to have been occupied by people. They also collected cores
farther away from rivers, where human impacts were unknown and used
markers in the cores to track the histories of fire, vegetation and
human alterations of the soil. The eastern Amazon has
already been studied in detail.
McMichael, Bush, and their colleagues conclude that people in the
central and western Amazon generally lived in small groups, with larger
populations on some rivers.
“There is strong evidence of large settlements in eastern Amazonia,
but our data point to different cultural adaptations in the central and
western Amazon, which left vast areas with very little human imprint,”
said Bush.
They did not live in large settlements throughout the basin as was
previously thought. Even sites of supposedly large settlements did not
show evidence of high population densities and large-scale agriculture.
All the signs point to smaller, mobile populations
before Europeans arrived. The impacts of these small populations were
largely limited to river banks.
“The amazing biodiversity of the Amazon is not a byproduct of past
human disturbance,” said McMichael. "We also can't assume that these
forests will be resilient to disturbance, because many have never been
disturbed, or have only been lightly disturbed
in the past."
Certainly there is no parallel in western Amazonia for the scale of
modern disturbance that accompanies industrial agriculture, road
construction, and the synergies of those disturbances with climate
change.”
No comments:
Post a Comment