Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents Summary for Volumes 1, 2 and 3
- Contents
- Volume 1 Maps
- Volume 2 Maps
- Volume 3 Maps
- About the Contributors
- Volume 1
- Volume 2
- V. East Asia
- VI. The Americas
- 2.13 The Americas: DNA
- 2.14 Initial Peopling of the Americas: Context, Findings, and Issues
- 2.15 Paleoindian and Archaic Periods in North America
- 2.16 The Paleoindian and Archaic of Central and South America
- 2.17 The Archaic and Formative Periods of Mesoamerica
- 2.18 Agricultural Origins and Social Implications in South America
- 2.19 The Basin of Mexico
- 2.20 The Olmec, 1800–400 bce
- 2.21 Oaxaca
- 2.22 The Origins and Development of Lowland Maya Civilisation
- 2.23 Early Coastal South America
- 2.24 The Development of Early Peruvian Civilisation (2600–300 bce)
- 2.25 Styles and Identities in the Central Andes: The Early Intermediate Period and Middle Horizon
- 2.26 The Late Intermediate Period and Late Horizon
- 2.27 Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela
- 2.28 Prehistory of Amazonia
- 2.29 Argentina and Chile
- 2.30 The Caribbean Islands
- 2.31 The Southwestern Region of North America
- 2.32 The Pacific Coast of North America
- 2.33 The Great Plains and Mississippi Valley
- 2.34 Eastern Atlantic Coast
- 2.35 Northern North America
- 2.36 The Americas: Languages
- Volume 3
- Index
- References
2.28 - Prehistory of Amazonia
from VI. - The Americas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents Summary for Volumes 1, 2 and 3
- Contents
- Volume 1 Maps
- Volume 2 Maps
- Volume 3 Maps
- About the Contributors
- Volume 1
- Volume 2
- V. East Asia
- VI. The Americas
- 2.13 The Americas: DNA
- 2.14 Initial Peopling of the Americas: Context, Findings, and Issues
- 2.15 Paleoindian and Archaic Periods in North America
- 2.16 The Paleoindian and Archaic of Central and South America
- 2.17 The Archaic and Formative Periods of Mesoamerica
- 2.18 Agricultural Origins and Social Implications in South America
- 2.19 The Basin of Mexico
- 2.20 The Olmec, 1800–400 bce
- 2.21 Oaxaca
- 2.22 The Origins and Development of Lowland Maya Civilisation
- 2.23 Early Coastal South America
- 2.24 The Development of Early Peruvian Civilisation (2600–300 bce)
- 2.25 Styles and Identities in the Central Andes: The Early Intermediate Period and Middle Horizon
- 2.26 The Late Intermediate Period and Late Horizon
- 2.27 Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela
- 2.28 Prehistory of Amazonia
- 2.29 Argentina and Chile
- 2.30 The Caribbean Islands
- 2.31 The Southwestern Region of North America
- 2.32 The Pacific Coast of North America
- 2.33 The Great Plains and Mississippi Valley
- 2.34 Eastern Atlantic Coast
- 2.35 Northern North America
- 2.36 The Americas: Languages
- Volume 3
- Index
- References
Summary
History of Research
In 20th-century theories about prehistory, it was thought that the Amazonian environment limited human cultural evolution to a static “tropical rainforest culture”. The habitat’s biological complexity and the broad climatic buffer of its equatorial warmth and moisture maintained diverse forest vegetation and an expansive riverine network for millions of years. Local habitats that have been investigated archaeologically in the region have also been continuously occupied since at least 13,500 years ago. But, despite strong continuity of the main habitat and of its human populations, Amazonians devised a myriad of very distinct and different regional cultures and ecological adaptations over that long period, not just the one “tropical forest culture” envisioned by Limitation Theorists (Roosevelt 2010). Furthermore, local cultures, rather than pale reflections of advanced cultures in adjacent regions, had distinctive complexity and scale and significant influence on the other regions. Thus, we have a paradox: in prehistoric Amazonia, a relatively stable environment, the indigenous human cultures and societies were tenacious, innovative, dynamic and expansive.
Major prescientific researchers on Amazonian prehistory in late-19th- and early-20th-century Brazil include L. Netto, who wrote about Marajoara art and society; D. S. Penna, who wrote on the shell mound cultures of the Lower Amazon; E. Goeldi, who wrote on the Ariste funerary culture at the mouth of the Amazon; and C. Hartt, who wrote on all the cultures. Hartt was a young Canadian trained at Harvard, who worked for both North American and Brazilian institutions and built a team of brilliant young researchers. He was the most able, critical and productive of these scholars.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge World Prehistory , pp. 1175 - 1199Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014