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      The Ethics of Anthropology and Amerindian Research: Reporting on Environmental Degradation and Warfare 

      Imagining Human Alteration of Ancient Landscapes in Central and South America

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      Springer New York

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          Paleoindian Cave Dwellers in the Amazon: The Peopling of the Americas

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            Pre-Columbian urbanism, anthropogenic landscapes, and the future of the Amazon.

            The archaeology of pre-Columbian polities in the Amazon River basin forces a reconsideration of early urbanism and long-term change in tropical forest landscapes. We describe settlement and land-use patterns of complex societies on the eve of European contact (after 1492) in the Upper Xingu region of the Brazilian Amazon. These societies were organized in articulated clusters, representing small independent polities, within a regional peer polity. These patterns constitute a "galactic" form of prehistoric urbanism, sharing features with small-scale urban polities in other areas. Understanding long-term change in coupled human-environment systems relating to these societies has implications for conservation and sustainable development, notably to control ecological degradation and maintain regional biodiversity.
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              Amazon rain-forest fires.

              Charcoal is common in the soils of mature rain forests within 75 kilometers of San Carlos de Rio Negro in the north central Amazon Basin. Carbon-14 dates of soil charcoal from this region indicate that numerous fires have occurred since the mid-Holocene epoch. Charcoal is most common in tierra firme forest Oxisols and Ultisols and less common in caatinga and igapo forest soils. Climatic changes or human activities, or both, have caused rain-forest fires.
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                Book Chapter
                2012
                November 19 2011
                : 235-267
                10.1007/978-1-4614-1065-2_10
                a0dd8860-1774-4f3c-b538-f46dda9c913c
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