The old paradigm that Amazonia's tropical ecosystems prevented cultural development beyond small-scale shifting agricultural economies, that had little environmental impact, no longer holds true for much of Amazonia. A diversity of archaeological evidence, including terra preta soils, raised fields, causeways, large habitation mounds, geometric earthworks, and megalithic monuments, all point to considerable cultural complexity and environmental impacts. However, uncertainty remains over the chronology of these cultures, their diet and economy, and the scale of environmental impact and land use associated with them. Here, we argue that a cross-disciplinary approach, closely coupling palaeoecology and archaeology, can potentially resolve thes...
International audience"The scale and nature of pre-Columbian human impacts in Amazonia are currently...
International audienceThe marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be dete...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Research via the ...
After the 1990s, with increasing scientific evidence for widespread human interference on Amazonian ...
An archaeological perspective on soil science points toward the relationship between the environment...
A debate that has received much attention in recent years is the nature and scale of pre-Columbian i...
The Amazon basin is considered nowadays amongst the lasts “green lungs” on Earth. This region has be...
My dissertation investigates inconsistencies in the ways Amazonia has been presented to the public a...
We present a multiproxy study of land use by a pre-Columbian earth mounds culture in the Bolivian Am...
The ecological status of prehistoric Amazonian forests remains widely debated. The concept of ancien...
Archeologists, paleoecologists and anthropologists argue that ecologists need to give greater consid...
The emergence of sedentism and agriculture in Amazonia continues to sit uncomfortably within account...
Archeologists, paleoecologists and anthropologists argue that ecologists need to give greater consid...
While large-scale pre-Columbian human occupation and ecological disturbance have been demonstrated c...
International audience"The scale and nature of pre-Columbian human impacts in Amazonia are currently...
International audienceThe marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be dete...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Research via the ...
After the 1990s, with increasing scientific evidence for widespread human interference on Amazonian ...
An archaeological perspective on soil science points toward the relationship between the environment...
A debate that has received much attention in recent years is the nature and scale of pre-Columbian i...
The Amazon basin is considered nowadays amongst the lasts “green lungs” on Earth. This region has be...
My dissertation investigates inconsistencies in the ways Amazonia has been presented to the public a...
We present a multiproxy study of land use by a pre-Columbian earth mounds culture in the Bolivian Am...
The ecological status of prehistoric Amazonian forests remains widely debated. The concept of ancien...
Archeologists, paleoecologists and anthropologists argue that ecologists need to give greater consid...
The emergence of sedentism and agriculture in Amazonia continues to sit uncomfortably within account...
Archeologists, paleoecologists and anthropologists argue that ecologists need to give greater consid...
While large-scale pre-Columbian human occupation and ecological disturbance have been demonstrated c...
International audience"The scale and nature of pre-Columbian human impacts in Amazonia are currently...
International audienceThe marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be dete...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Research via the ...