Heckenberger Michael J, Russell J Christian, Toney Joshua R, Schmidt Morgan J
Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2007 Feb 28;362(1478):197-208. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2006.1979.
For centuries Amazonia has held the Western scientific and popular imagination as a primordial forest, only minimally impacted by small, simple and dispersed groups that inhabit the region. Studies in historical ecology refute this view. Rather than pristine tropical forest, some areas are better viewed as constructed or 'domesticated' landscapes, dramatically altered by indigenous groups in the past. This paper reviews recent archaeological research in several areas along the Amazon River with evidence of large pre-European (ca 400-500 calendar years before the present) occupations and large-scale transformations of forest and wetland environments. Research from the southern margins of closed tropical forest, in the headwaters of the Xingu River, are highlighted as an example of constructed nature in the Amazon. In all cases, human influences dramatically altered the distribution, frequency and configurations of biological communities and ecological settings. Findings of historical change and cultural variability, including diverse small to medium-sized complex societies, have clear implications for questions of conservation and sustainability and, specifically, what constitutes 'hotspots' of bio-historical diversity in the Amazon region.
几个世纪以来,亚马逊地区在西方科学和大众的想象中一直是一片原始森林,只受到居住在该地区的小规模、简单且分散的群体的极小影响。历史生态学研究驳斥了这一观点。一些地区与其说是原始热带森林,不如说是人工建造或“驯化”的景观,过去曾被当地群体大幅改变。本文回顾了亚马逊河沿岸几个地区最近的考古研究,这些研究有证据表明在欧洲人到来之前(大约在距今400 - 500个历年之前)就有大规模的人类居住,以及森林和湿地环境的大规模转变。来自封闭热带森林南缘、欣古河源头的研究被重点提及,作为亚马逊地区人工建造自然的一个例子。在所有案例中,人类影响极大地改变了生物群落和生态环境的分布、频率和结构。历史变迁和文化多样性的研究结果,包括不同规模的中小型复杂社会,对于保护和可持续性问题,特别是对于亚马逊地区生物历史多样性“热点”的构成,有着明确的启示。