Multidisciplinary Approaches to Amazonian landscapes
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
The symposium will explore the environmental and anthropogenic factors that have created a distinctive Amazonian landscape over the past millennia. Unlike the Andes and Mesoamerica, the Amazon region was long believed to be a pristine land, a place where the environment constrained the formation of complex social formations. However, it is now known that prior to European colonization, larger groups of people with hierarchical socio-political organization and extensive networks of communication inhabited this region. Archaeological and ethnohistorical data demonstrated that the natives in the Amazon actively modified the landscape to meet economic, political and social needs. Thus, this distinctively anthropogenic landscape provides one of the most important database for understanding routinized social practices and their role in historical transformation.
The presentations in this session will discuss theories of landscapes as culturally meaningful places and as products of the interaction between human and non-human entities. Case studies from diverse areas will demonstrate how the study of the Amazon landscape enriched our understanding of past social organization, religious organization, and historical change.
Other Keywords
historical ecology •
Landscape •
Paleoecology •
Gis •
Amazonia •
Amazon •
Ceramics •
Mound •
Remote Sensing •
Archaeology
Geographic Keywords
South America
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-15 of 15)
- Documents (15)
- Amazonian Landscapes: the characteristics of anthropic landscapes in the Middle Xingu River (Pará, Brazil) from pre-colonial to Contemporary times (2016)
- Amazonian mounds. When Human sciences met Earth sciences (2016)
- Ancient plant management at ADEs on Santarem region from an archaeobotanical approach (2016)
- Arqueoastronomy and built landscape: the spatial orientation of geometric enclosures in Western Amazonia (2016)
- Detecting Pre-Columbian Paleoecological Disturbance in the Lower Amazon (2016)
- Different and complementary landscapes: A case of study in the Flona-Tapajós (2016)
- From Maps to Lives: Participatory Archaeology and the Fate of the Amazon in the Digital Age. (2016)
- The geographical distribution of the Amazonian Dark Earths in the Lower Amazon (2016)
- Historical ecology of landscape transformations and ceramic industries at the site of Cedro (Lower Tapajós) from pre-colonial to colonial times. (2016)
- Historical Ecology: Archaeology for a Sustainable Future (2016)
- A multiproxy approach to study past human impact on the Lower Amazon, Santarem (2016)
- Predicting the past: Remote sensing data as a tool for locating archaeological settlements in the Amazon (2016)
- Remote and proximal sensors for field mapping of Amazonian Dark Earths (2016)
- Where does the Amazon end? (2016)
- Where was the forest in the Upper and Norwest Amazon before the arrival of the Europeans? (2016)