Multidisciplinary approaches to the Amazonian past: introduction to the theme issue

Author:

Emlen Nicholas Q.12ORCID,Arias Leonardo13ORCID,van Gijn Rik1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, Leiden, The Netherlands

2. University of Groningen (Campus Fryslân), The Netherlands

3. Department of Evolutionary Genetics, Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany

Abstract

This theme issue presents collaborative research by anthropologists, linguists, archaeologists, geneticists, historians and biogeographers, who work across disciplinary boundaries to investigate the Amazonian past. Amazonia is a fertile ground in which to develop such multidisciplinary approaches because its relative paucity of documentary records makes other sources of evidence regarding the past more important; because multidisciplinary approaches are well suited to address important unanswered questions in Amazonian history; and because a recent and dramatic reappraisal of the region's past make this an exciting time to conduct this sort of research. The papers in this theme issue feature different combinations of academic disciplines, and they address different geographical regions and historical periods, but all of them show how combining insights from different fields can help illuminate aspects of the Amazonian past that would otherwise remain obscure to them all.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials,Biochemistry,Bioengineering,Biophysics,Biotechnology

Reference12 articles.

1. Lyon PJ. 2004 Native South Americans: ethnology of the least known continent. Eugene, OR: Resource Publications.

2. Meggers BJ. 1971 Amazonia: man and culture in a counterfeit paradise. Chicago, IL: Aldine, Atherton.

3. Balée WL. 2013 Cultural forests of the Amazon: a historical ecology of people and their landscapes. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press.

4. Diversity, multilingualism and inter-ethnic relations in the long-term history of the Upper Rio Negro region of the Amazon

5. Interpreting mismatches between linguistic and genetic patterns among speakers of Tanimuka (Eastern Tukanoan) and Yukuna (Arawakan)

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