Anthropology and Archaeology Program, Institute of Social Sciences, Federal University of Western Para, Santarém, Pará, Brazil.
Archéozoologie, archéobotanique: sociétés, pratiques et environnements (UMR 7209), CNRS, Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, Paris, France.
PLoS One. 2019 May 15;14(5):e0214638. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0214638. eCollection 2019.
Recent evidence suggests the existence of Pre-Hispanic fisheries in savanna areas of the Amazon basin. How these fisheries may have functioned is still poorly known. Although many studies have drawn attention to how Pre-Hispanic inhabitants of these savannas managed to deal with excess water, little attention has been paid to understanding how large and permanent populations were sustained during long periods of drought. In the Llanos de Mojos, one of the largest savannas in South America, the landscape is greatly affected by the impacts of annual, seasonal flooding and inundations, alternating with a dry period that can last 4-6 months. The fishing practices in this area were studied on the basis of analysis of more than 17,000 fish remains recovered at Loma Salvatierra, a monumental mound located in an interfluvial area 50 km from the Mamoré River and occupied between 500 and 1400 AD. In Loma Salvatierra, a network of circular walled ponds connected to a system of canals has been identified, raising questions about a possible use of these structures for fishing. The exceptional conservation of the bone material has enabled precise taxonomic identification of more than 35 taxa, the richest fish spectrum thus far documented in the Mojos region. The dominant fish, swamp-eels (Synbranchus spp.), armored catfishes (Hoplosternum spp.), lungfish (Lepidosiren paradoxa), and tiger-fish (Hoplias malabaricus) are characteristic of shallow and stagnant waters. Our work documents the first zooarchaeological evidence of a dryland, interfluvial fishing system in the Bolivian Amazon that incorporates distinct species and fishing practices, demonstrating that these regions contain year round resources. Research is taking its first steps toward understanding landscape modifications, fish environments, and specific cultural technologies employed on this and other lowland neotropical savannas that differ from those for fishing in open waters and rivers.
最近的证据表明,在亚马逊盆地的热带稀树草原地区存在前西班牙时期的渔业。这些渔业是如何运作的,仍然知之甚少。尽管许多研究都注意到了这些热带稀树草原的前西班牙居民是如何设法应对多余的水的,但很少有人关注如何在长时间的干旱期间维持大量和永久的人口。在南美洲最大的热带稀树草原之一的莫霍斯平原,景观受到每年季节性洪水和泛滥的影响很大,与持续 4-6 个月的干旱期交替出现。在该地区进行的捕鱼实践是基于对位于莫莫雷河 50 公里处的一个interfluvial 地区的拉马萨利特雷山上回收的 17000 多条鱼类遗骸的分析。在拉马萨利特雷山上,已经确定了一个圆形有墙池塘的网络,与运河系统相连,这引发了对这些结构可能用于捕鱼的质疑。骨骼材料的异常保存使得能够对 35 个以上分类群进行精确的分类鉴定,这是迄今为止在莫霍斯地区记录到的最丰富的鱼类光谱。占主导地位的鱼类,沼泽鳗鱼(Synbranchus spp.),装甲鲶鱼(Hoplosternum spp.),肺鱼(Lepidosiren paradoxa)和虎鱼(Hoplias malabaricus)是浅而停滞的水的特征。我们的工作记录了第一个在玻利维亚亚马逊旱地的河流间捕鱼系统的动物考古证据,该系统包含独特的物种和捕鱼实践,表明这些地区全年都有资源。研究工作正在迈出第一步,以了解景观改造、鱼类环境以及在这些地区和其他低地新热带热带稀树草原上使用的特定文化技术,这些技术与在开阔水域和河流中捕鱼不同。