During the last two decades, new archaeological projects which systematically integrate a variety of plant recovery techniques, along with palaeoecology, palaeoclimate, soil science and floristic inventories, have started to transform our understanding of plant exploitation, cultivation and domestication in tropical South America. Archaeobotanical studies are providing a far greater appreciation of the role of plants in the diets of early colonists. Since ~13ka, these diets relied mainly on palm, tree fruits, and underground tubers, along with terrestrial and riverine faunal resources. Recent evidence indicates two areas of precocious plant cultivation and domestication: the sub-Andean montane forest of NW South America and the shrub savann...
During the twentieth century, Amazonia was widely regarded as relatively pristine nature, little imp...
Numerous questions in Amazonian archaeology place great emphasis on the relationships between human ...
The marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be detected today. Levis et a...
During the last two decades, new archaeological projects which systematically integrate a variety of...
The onset of plant cultivation is one of the most important cultural transitions in human history1–4...
Recent decades have witnessed the rapid expansion of interest in and research on the domestication o...
The emergence of sedentism and agriculture in Amazonia continues to sit uncomfortably within account...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Nature via the ...
The legacy of pre-Columbian land use in the Amazonian rainforest is one of the most controversial to...
After the 1990s, with increasing scientific evidence for widespread human interference on Amazonian ...
Southwestern Amazonia is considered an early centre of plant domestication in the New World, but mos...
The Amazon witnessed the emergence of complex societies after 2500 years ago that altered tropical l...
For millennia, Amazonian peoples have managed forest resources, modifying the natural environment in...
Amazonia offers some striking contrasts to better-known regions of the world, notably the Middle Eas...
This investigation derives from research conducted over several years and contributes to the underst...
During the twentieth century, Amazonia was widely regarded as relatively pristine nature, little imp...
Numerous questions in Amazonian archaeology place great emphasis on the relationships between human ...
The marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be detected today. Levis et a...
During the last two decades, new archaeological projects which systematically integrate a variety of...
The onset of plant cultivation is one of the most important cultural transitions in human history1–4...
Recent decades have witnessed the rapid expansion of interest in and research on the domestication o...
The emergence of sedentism and agriculture in Amazonia continues to sit uncomfortably within account...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Nature via the ...
The legacy of pre-Columbian land use in the Amazonian rainforest is one of the most controversial to...
After the 1990s, with increasing scientific evidence for widespread human interference on Amazonian ...
Southwestern Amazonia is considered an early centre of plant domestication in the New World, but mos...
The Amazon witnessed the emergence of complex societies after 2500 years ago that altered tropical l...
For millennia, Amazonian peoples have managed forest resources, modifying the natural environment in...
Amazonia offers some striking contrasts to better-known regions of the world, notably the Middle Eas...
This investigation derives from research conducted over several years and contributes to the underst...
During the twentieth century, Amazonia was widely regarded as relatively pristine nature, little imp...
Numerous questions in Amazonian archaeology place great emphasis on the relationships between human ...
The marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be detected today. Levis et a...