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      Amazonian Dark Earths in Western Amazonia?

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      Archaeology International
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            Main article text

            Western Amazonia is a large region that includes a global biodiversity hotspot (the Yasuni National Park) and which still retains large tracts of intact native rainforest. Along the Napo River (Fig. 1), which originates in the Ecuadorian eastern lowlands and discharges into the Peruvian reaches of the Amazon River, current human settlement is uneven and highly dispersed. In Ecuador, towns are associated with the encroachment of oil extraction activities and the expansion of the agricultural frontier; small villages are found along an expanding road network and also dot the banks of the main rivers; and small groups of nomadic peoples, some in voluntary isolation from our industrialised society, inhabit the rugged interfluvial terrain beyond the main rivers. In Peru, small villages dot the middle reaches of the Napo River and its main tributaries, and there are also reports of indigenous groups in voluntary isolation. Larger settlements become more prevalent in the lower Napo, closer to the Amazon River and within reach of the road network leading to the Peruvian city of Iquitos.

            Fig. 1

            Western Amazonia, showing the research area of the project (purple). (© OpenStreetMap contributors CC BY-SA licence).

            The Napo River was first explored in the 16th century AD by Spanish conquistadores who left some of the most intriguing accounts of lowland indigenous peoples in lowland South America. These and reports from the 17th and 18th century described densely-settled, hierarchically-organised, riparian settlements that, as time went by, became increasingly overwhelmed by Old World diseases and slave raiding expeditions (Newsom 1996). Owing to a lack of written sources before the 16th century AD, only archaeological investigations can provide insights into the societies that existed in the region in pre-Columbian times. Archaeological evidence for pre-Columbian occupations along the Napo River, however, is quite unevenly distributed: the upper reaches of the Napo in Ecuador were explored by Smithsonian Institution archaeologists Clifford Evans and Betty Meggers, who established the backbone of the region’s ceramic sequence (Evans & Meggers 1968). More recently, amateur collecting by missionaries (Cabodevilla 1998) and oil industry-funded archaeological contract work (e.g. Netherly 1997, Solorzano 2007, Arellano 2009) have provided additional assessments of different pottery and settlement types. In contrast, along the Peruvian middle and lower reaches of the Napo River, scientifically-documented archaeological evidence is virtually unreported (Bolaños 1990).

            Supported by the British Academy, and thanks to scientific collaborations with Fernanda Ugalde (Pontifical Catholic University, Quito, Ecuador) and Santiago Rivas Panduro (Peruvian Culture Ministry, Loreto Division, Peru), Manuel Arroyo-Kalin is currently developing an international research project focused on the archaeology of the Napo River. A key theme is the presence of Amazonian Dark Earths (ADEs), which are anthropic soils of pre-Columbian origin generally regarded as proxies of large pre-Columbian sedentary occupations and, potentially, agricultural intensification (Arroyo-Kalin 2010). ADEs are ubiquitous in the Brazilian Amazon but have rarely been reported in western Amazonia (Arroyo-Kalin 2012), leading some to suggest that low population density was characteristic of the region in pre-Columbian times (McMichael et al. 2012). Through archaeological survey, the project is currently assessing on the ground whether this reported lack of ADEs is a reflection of insufficient archaeological survey or is indeed an archaeologically-significant observation. The project is also examining afresh the ceramic sequence of the Ecuadorian Napo River and assessing the extent to which it applies to occupations along the middle and lower Napo, Peru. Both lines of research are relevant to developing a full account of pre-Columbian occupations in the region, to evaluating 16–17th century AD ethnohistorical accounts that suggest Tupi language speakers dominated large tracts of the upper Amazon and its main tributaries (Chantre y Herrera 1901), and to establishing the timing and direction of a pre-Columbian expansion of Tupian groups into the region (Lathrap 1970). Following two short field seasons (one of which also involved the participation of José Oliver, also at the Institute of Archaeology), additional fieldwork is planned for 2014 and 2015.

            References

            1. Arellano J. Culturas prehispánicas del Napo y El Aguarico, Amazonía Ecuatoriana: (transecta Yuturi Lago Agrio). 2009. Lima: Centro Cultural José Pío Aza.

            2. Arroyo-Kalin M. The Amazonian Formative: crop domestication and anthropogenic soils. Diversity. 2010. Vol. 2:473–504. [Cross Ref]

            3. Arroyo-Kalin M. Slash-burn-and-churn: Landscape history and crop cultivation in pre-Columbian Amazonia. Quaternary International. 2012. Vol. 249:4–18. [Cross Ref]

            4. Cabodevilla M A. Culturas de ayer y hoy en el Río Napo. 1998. Quito: Cicame.

            5. Chantre y Herrera J. Historia de las Misiones de la Compañía de Jesús en el Marañón Español. 1901. Madrid: Imprenta de AVBIAE.

            6. Evans C, Meggers B J. Archeological Investigations on the Rio Napo, Eastern Ecuador. 1968. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.

            7. Lathrap D W. The Upper Amazon. 1970. Southampton: Thames & Hudson.

            8. McMichael C H, et al.. Sparse Pre-Columbian Human Habitation in Western Amazonia. Science. 2012. Vol. 336:1429–1431. [Cross Ref]

            9. Netherly P. Loma y Ribera: patrones de asentamiento prehistóricos en la Amazonía Ecuatoriana. Fronteras de Investigación. 1997. Vol. 1:

            10. Newson L A. The population of the Amazon basin in 1492: a view from the Ecuadorian headwaters. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers (NS). 1996. Vol. 21(4):5–24. [Cross Ref]

            11. Solórzano M S. Arqueología de contrato una forma de minimizar el impacto durante el proceso de remoción de suelo. Estudio de caso en Orellana (Ecuador). Praxis Archaeologica. 2007. Vol. 2:107–128

            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Journal
            2048-4194
            Archaeology International
            Ubiquity Press
            2048-4194
            23 October 2014
            : 17
            : 1
            : 58-60
            Affiliations
            [-1]UCL Institute of Archaeology, London WC1H 0PY, United Kingdom
            Article
            10.5334/ai.1709
            286f3111-4b8b-43a1-873f-2620b273636a
            Copyright: © 2014 The Author(s)

            This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.

            History
            Categories
            Research update

            Archaeology,Cultural studies

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