An Assessment of Soil Phytolith Analysis as a Palaeoecological Tool for Identifying Pre-Columbian Land Use in Amazonian Rainforests

Author:

Hill James1ORCID,Black Stuart1,Araujo-Murakami Alejandro2,Boot Rene3,Brienen Roel4,Feldpausch Ted5ORCID,Leigue John6,Murakami Samaria6,Monteagudo Abel7,Pardo Guido8,Peña-Claros Marielos9,Phillips Oliver L.4ORCID,Toledo Marisol2,Vos Vincent8ORCID,Zuidema Pieter9,Mayle Francis E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Reading, Reading RG6 6AH, UK

2. Noel Kempff Mercado Museum of Natural History, Universidad Autónoma Gabriel Rene Moreno, Santa Cruz AI 2489, Bolivia

3. Department of Plant Ecology, Utrecht University, 3584 CS Utrecht, The Netherlands

4. School of Geography, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK

5. Geography, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4PY, UK

6. Bolivian Amazon Forest Management Program (PROMAB), Autonomous University of Beni, Trinidad 54P5+X33, Bolivia

7. School of Biological Sciences, National University of San Antonio the Abad, Cusco 08000, Peru

8. Faculty of Forest Sciences, Autonomous University of Beni, Riberalta 2W3Q+VHJ, Bolivia

9. Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group, Department of Environmental Sciences, Wageningen University, 6708 PB Wageningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

Phytolith analysis is a well-established archaeobotanical tool, having provided important insights into pre-Columbian crop cultivation and domestication across Amazonia through the Holocene. Yet, its use as a palaeoecological tool is in its infancy in Amazonia and its effectiveness for reconstructing pre-Columbian land-use beyond archaeological sites (i.e., ‘off-site’) has so far received little critical attention. This paper examines both new and previously published soil phytolith data from SW Amazonia to assess the robustness of this proxy for reconstructing pre-Columbian land-use. We conducted the study via off-site soil pits radiating 7.5 km beyond a geoglyph in Acre state, Brazil, and 50 km beyond a ring-ditch in northern Bolivia, spanning the expected gradients in historical land-use intensity. We found that the spatio-temporal patterns in palm phytolith data across our soil-pit transects support the hypothesis that pre-Columbian peoples enriched their forests with palms over several millennia, although phytoliths are limited in their ability to capture small-scale crop cultivation and deforestation. Despite these drawbacks, we conclude that off-site soil phytolith analysis can provide novel insights into pre-Columbian land use, provided it is effectively integrated with other land-use (e.g., charcoal) and archaeological data.

Funder

NERC

UK NERC Radiocarbon Facility

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Earth-Surface Processes

Reference120 articles.

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