Credit: (top left) Crystal McMichael and
Delores Piperno;
(bottom left) Crystal McMichael; (right) Dolores
Piperno/Smithsonian NMNH
|
What were the ancient societies of Amazonia like before
the first European sailors clambered ashore in the mid-16th century carrying
strange new diseases and the seeds of war and conquest? For years,
archaeologists have duelled over different views. Initially, most saw the vast
Amazon Basin—which sprawls across Brazil, Peru, and five other countries in
South America—as home to sparse bands of pre-Columbian hunters and gatherers
who preserved the region's forests as wilderness. Then, archaeological
discoveries in the 1990s revealed large villages and complex societies in
eastern Amazonia, giving rise to the theory that prehistoric agriculturists had
cleared and intensively managed forests across the Amazon Basin for thousands
of years.
Much rides on this assessment. If the Amazon, with its
great diversity of plant and animal life today, was once extensively cleared
and supported a large population of prehistoric people, that bodes well for the
forest's powers of recovery. But if the region harbored only small, scattered
populations, then today's ecosystem is truly virgin forest and perhaps very
vulnerable to human activities.
Now a new study, published online today in Science, suggests
that large ancient populations never
cleared and tamed the western Amazon. By analyzing soil samples from 55 locations in central
and western Amazonia, a team of American and Brazilian researchers led by
paleoecologist Crystal McMichael, who is now at the of the University of New
Hampshire in Durham,have found that pre-Columbian bands ranged in small numbers
over the region and gathered food without slashing, burning, or cultivating
large tracts of the Amazon. "Most of the forest we sampled has never been
intensively disturbed," McMichael says.
McMichael and her colleagues journeyed by riverboat,
small aircraft, and four-wheel-drive trucks across an area measuring 3 million
square kilometers, taking soil cores from river bluffs close to known
archaeological sites and from inland sites such as randomized localities along
a transect from Porto Velho, Brazil, to Manaus, Brazil. Back in the lab,
McMichael analyzed each of the 247 cores to determine the abundance of
charcoal, an indicator that humans set the forest ablaze to clear trees and
enrich soils for crops, since natural fires are rare in Amazonia. In addition,
archaeobotanist Dolores Piperno of the Smithsonian Institution National Museum
of Natural History in Washington, D.C., extracted and identified phytoliths --
characteristic microscopic silica fossils that are produced by many plant
species and that trap minute amounts of carbon. Then the investigators sent
samples of the charcoal and phytoliths out for radiocarbon dating.
The results took the team by surprise. In the
river-bluff cores, they found bits of charcoal, phytoliths of burned grasses,
and phytoliths of herbaceous plants often found in disturbed areas—but no
phytoliths of common Amazon crops. This suggested that humans had cleared and
disturbed some parts of the forest there, but there was little evidence of
farming. And in the inland cores, the team detected relatively few traces of
charcoal and little to no sign of burned phytoliths, disturbance-related
phytoliths, or crop phytoliths. "If humans were in those areas, they
didn't stay very long, and they didn't farm," says Piperno.
Moreover, this picture of small groups of hunters and
gatherers in the western Amazon seems to fit with some data concerning ancient
agriculture in the region. Before the arrival of Europeans, Amazonia's
inhabitants had only stone axes at their disposal, and clearing large
rainforest tracts with such tools would have been enormously time-consuming. A
study conducted in the 1970s, for example, showed that a worker equipped with a
stone ax needed 115 hours to cut down just one tree. So it is possible that
slash-and-burn agriculture arose in the western Amazon only after Europeans
arrived with metal tools.
The team's findings are bound to stir controversy and
debate, however. Anna Roosevelt, an archaeologist at the University of
Illinois, Chicago, thinks the team failed to gather sufficient data to reach
any conclusions. She says that the 120-centimeter-long soil cores that team
members took with a handheld auger may not have been sufficient to find deeply
buried evidence of ancient human agriculture. "You really need to study
the geomorphology of each sampling site," says Roosevelt, "because in
Amazonia there's a lot of erosion and redeposition [of sediments by water], and
you need to find out exactly where the human occupation surfaces are."
But Deborah Pearsall, an archaeologist at the University
of Missouri in Columbia, sees little to criticize in the study, calling it
"really solid." The findings, she notes, make a lot of sense: the
study areas in the western Amazon receive as much as 3500 mm of rain a year,
far more than eastern regions where ancient farmers clearly tended a variety of
crops. "So maybe early agriculturalists are not favoring this [wetter
western region] because there are higher pest loads there and more highly
leeched soils."
Michael Heckenberger, an archaeologist at the University of
Florida in Gainesville, adds that the study serves as a badly needed reality
check to much of the blue-skying of the past, when researchers developed
sweeping models for the entire Amazon region, an area roughly the size of the
continental United States. "We've really just scratched the surface in
this region [archaeologically]", Heckenberger concludes, "and I think
we need to be very cautious in creating highly generalized models of what such
a vast areas would have been like."
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