Past human modification of forests has been documented in central, southwestern, and eastern Amazonia, especially near large rivers. Northwestern Amazonia, and interfluvial forests there in particular, are assumed to exhibit little past human impact. We analyzed soils and floristic structure and composition of interfluvial forests located in the Içana River basin, northwestern Amazonia, to assess their degree of past human modification. Ancient Baniwa village sites, abandoned centuries ago, have given rise to “ancestral forests” with as much as 57% of all trees/palms belonging to a group of species managed currently by the Baniwa, compared to only 10% of such species in old-growth forests that are not remembered as having been inhabited or ...
Archeologists, paleoecologists and anthropologists argue that ecologists need to give greater consid...
Locally extensive pre-Columbian human occupation and modification occurred in the forests of the cen...
The ecological status of prehistoric Amazonian forests remains widely debated. The concept of ancien...
Native Amazonian populations managed forest resources in numerous ways, often creating oligarchic fo...
BACKGROUND: Native Amazonian populations managed forest resources in numerous ways, often creating o...
The idea that Amazonian forests have been largely untouched by humans has fascinated naturalists, po...
ABSTRACT Amazonian peoples use and manage plant populations in previously domesticated landscapes, b...
Background: Native Amazonian populations managed forest resources in numerous ways, often creating o...
Aims: The extent and persistence of pre-Columbian human legacies in old-growth Amazonian forests are...
For millennia, Amazonian peoples have managed forest resources, modifying the natural environment in...
International audienceThe marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be dete...
This paper addresses a topic highlighted in recent arguments by Amazonian scholars: the extent to wh...
Archeologists, paleoecologists and anthropologists argue that ecologists need to give greater consid...
Locally extensive pre-Columbian human occupation and modification occurred in the forests of the cen...
The ecological status of prehistoric Amazonian forests remains widely debated. The concept of ancien...
Native Amazonian populations managed forest resources in numerous ways, often creating oligarchic fo...
BACKGROUND: Native Amazonian populations managed forest resources in numerous ways, often creating o...
The idea that Amazonian forests have been largely untouched by humans has fascinated naturalists, po...
ABSTRACT Amazonian peoples use and manage plant populations in previously domesticated landscapes, b...
Background: Native Amazonian populations managed forest resources in numerous ways, often creating o...
Aims: The extent and persistence of pre-Columbian human legacies in old-growth Amazonian forests are...
For millennia, Amazonian peoples have managed forest resources, modifying the natural environment in...
International audienceThe marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be dete...
This paper addresses a topic highlighted in recent arguments by Amazonian scholars: the extent to wh...
Archeologists, paleoecologists and anthropologists argue that ecologists need to give greater consid...
Locally extensive pre-Columbian human occupation and modification occurred in the forests of the cen...
The ecological status of prehistoric Amazonian forests remains widely debated. The concept of ancien...