Pre-Columbian earthworks in Coastal Amazonia

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Abstract

As in other parts of Amazonia, pre-Columbian Indians have profoundly modified the coast of the Guianas. Between 650 and 1650 AD, Arauquinoid people occupied a territory that was approximately 600 km long and used the raised field technique intensively before the European conquest. They erected thousands of raised fields of various shapes, dug canals, ditches, and pathways, and built artificial mounds to establish their villages. All these earthworks changed forever the face of the coastal flooded savannas and their ecology. Such labor was probably organized under the leadership of a central authority: it seems that Arauquinoid societies were organized in a chiefdom system. Statistical calculations, based on the known surface area of raised fields and on their estimated productivity, suggest a population density of 50 to 100 inhabitants per km 2. Pre-Columbian inhabitants of the Guianas coast carefully organized, managed and "anthropisized" their territory following a specific pattern. © 2010 by the author; licensee Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Basel, Switzerland.

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APA

Rostain, S. (2010). Pre-Columbian earthworks in Coastal Amazonia. Diversity, 2(3), 331–352. https://doi.org/10.3390/d2030331

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