New evidence for subsistence strategies of late pre-colonial societies of the mouth of the Amazon based on carbon and nitrogen isotopic data
Autor: | Vera Guapindaia, Tiago Hermenegildo, Tamsin C. O'Connell, Eduardo Góes Neves |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
010506 paleontology Cultivated plant taxonomy δ13C Ecology Range (biology) Amazon rainforest Amazonian Subsistence agriculture Biology Before Present Colonialism 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Earth-Surface Processes |
Zdroj: | Quaternary International. 448:139-149 |
ISSN: | 1040-6182 |
Popis: | The nature of subsistence strategies employed by the past inhabitants of Amazonia has been a widely debated topic, however little evidence has been found so far in order to support some of the proposed hypotheses. This article contributes to this debate by presenting new δ13C and δ15N data from the human populations that occupied the Maraca region of the mouth of the Amazon river, around 500 BP (years before present). It directly compares these newly generated results to previously published human isotope data from neighbouring Marajo Island (Marajoara phase, 1600 to 700 BP), as well as other areas in the lowland Neotropics, in an attempt to build a bigger picture of the dietary habits of the Lower Amazon pre-colonial populations. The overall results suggest that the populations that occupied the mouth of the Amazon after 2000 BP had diets based on the exploitation of fish and a wide range of C3 plant resources, as well as possibly having a minor C4 or CAM component. The data presented are also consistent with an emerging consensus that there was no single adaptive pattern for ancient Amazonian populations and proposes that diversified economic strategies based on wild and cultivated plants combined with the exploitation of faunal resources could have developed over time and sustained long-term successful patterns of human occupations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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