The role of plants in early human migrations across the globe has received little attention compared to big game hunting. Tropical forests in particular have been seen as a barrier for Late Pleistocene human dispersals due to perceived difficulties in obtaining sufficient subsistence resources. Archaeobotanical data from the Cerro Azul rock outcrop in the Colombian Amazon details Late Pleistocene plant exploitation providing insight into early human subsistence in the tropical forest. The dominance of palm taxa in the assemblage, dating from 12.5 ka BP, allows us to speculate on processes of ecological knowledge transfer and the identification of edible resources in a novel environment. Following the hypothesis of Martin Jones from his 2009...
Recent decades have witnessed the rapid expansion of interest in and research on the domestication o...
Southwestern Amazonia is considered an early centre of plant domestication in the New World, but mos...
For millennia, Amazonian peoples have managed forest resources, modifying the natural environment in...
The role of plants in early human migrations across the globe has received little attention compared...
The role of plants in early human migrations across the globe has received little attention compared...
Evidence from several earthwork-building societies has recently been discovered in Amazonia that cha...
During the last two decades, new archaeological projects which systematically integrate a variety of...
This paper addresses a topic highlighted in recent arguments by Amazonian scholars: the extent to wh...
After the 1990s, with increasing scientific evidence for widespread human interference on Amazonian ...
We compare past and present systems of management of palms in the Colombian Amazon, based on archaeo...
Aim: In Amazonia, 227 of c. 16,000 tree species account for half the individual trees (termed ‘hyper...
Aim: Palms are iconic and dominant elements of neotropical forests. In the Amazon region, palms have...
The legacy of pre-Columbian land use in the Amazonian rainforest is one of the most controversial to...
International audienceThe marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be dete...
Recent decades have witnessed the rapid expansion of interest in and research on the domestication o...
Southwestern Amazonia is considered an early centre of plant domestication in the New World, but mos...
For millennia, Amazonian peoples have managed forest resources, modifying the natural environment in...
The role of plants in early human migrations across the globe has received little attention compared...
The role of plants in early human migrations across the globe has received little attention compared...
Evidence from several earthwork-building societies has recently been discovered in Amazonia that cha...
During the last two decades, new archaeological projects which systematically integrate a variety of...
This paper addresses a topic highlighted in recent arguments by Amazonian scholars: the extent to wh...
After the 1990s, with increasing scientific evidence for widespread human interference on Amazonian ...
We compare past and present systems of management of palms in the Colombian Amazon, based on archaeo...
Aim: In Amazonia, 227 of c. 16,000 tree species account for half the individual trees (termed ‘hyper...
Aim: Palms are iconic and dominant elements of neotropical forests. In the Amazon region, palms have...
The legacy of pre-Columbian land use in the Amazonian rainforest is one of the most controversial to...
International audienceThe marks of prehistoric human societies on tropical forests can still be dete...
Recent decades have witnessed the rapid expansion of interest in and research on the domestication o...
Southwestern Amazonia is considered an early centre of plant domestication in the New World, but mos...
For millennia, Amazonian peoples have managed forest resources, modifying the natural environment in...