Departamento de Antropología, Universidad Alberto Hurtado, Santiago 8340536, Chile.
Núcleo Milenio de Ecología Histórica Aplicada para los Bosques Áridos (AFOREST), Santiago 7820436, Chile.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Apr 30;121(18):e2320506121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2320506121. Epub 2024 Apr 22.
In deserts, water has been singled out as the most important factor for choosing where to settle, but trees were likely an important part of the landscape for hunter-gatherers beyond merely constituting an economic resource. Yet, this critical aspect has not been considered archaeologically. Here, we present the results of mapping and radiocarbon dating of a truly unique archaeological record. Over 150 preserved stumps around five Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene archaeological campsites (12,800 to 11,200 cal BP) show that trees were key features in the creation of everyday habitats for the first inhabitants of the Atacama Desert. At two of these sites, QM12 and QM35, the spatial and chronological correlation between trees and hearths reveals that people located their homes under the tree canopy. At residential site QM35, artifact distribution coincides with a grove dated to ~11,600 to 11,200 cal BP. A third residential area (QM32) occurred along the grove margins ~12,000 to 11,200 cal BP. Based on the distinct cultural material of these two camps, we propose that two different groups intermittently shared this rich wetland-grove environment. The tree taxa suggest a preference for the native a tree scarcely present on the landscape today, over the endemic, nitrogen-fixing , both for toolmaking and firewood and even though the was locally more abundant. Together with the spatial and chronological coincidence of campsites, hearths, and trees, we propose that people spared the most abundant and resilient species to create their homes, in turn promoting fertility oases amid the Atacama's hyperaridity.
在沙漠中,水被单独挑出来作为选择定居点的最重要因素,但对于狩猎采集者来说,树木可能不仅仅是一种经济资源,它们也是景观的重要组成部分。然而,这一关键方面在考古学上尚未得到考虑。在这里,我们展示了对一个真正独特的考古记录进行绘图和放射性碳测年的结果。在五个晚更新世/全新世考古营地(12800 至 11200 cal BP)周围发现了 150 多个保存完好的树桩,这表明树木是阿塔卡马沙漠第一批居民创造日常栖息地的关键特征。在 QM12 和 QM35 这两个地点,树木和火塘之间的空间和时间相关性表明,人们将他们的家建在树冠下。在居住点 QM35,人工制品的分布与一个可追溯到约 11600 至 11200 cal BP 的小树林相对应。第三个居住区域(QM32)位于小树林边缘,时间约为 12000 至 11200 cal BP。基于这两个营地的独特文化材料,我们提出两个不同的群体间歇性地共享这个丰富的湿地-小树林环境。树木的分类表明,人们更喜欢当地原生树种,而不是今天景观上几乎不存在的外来树种和具有固氮能力的树种,尽管后两者在当地更为丰富。考虑到营地、火塘和树木在空间和时间上的巧合,我们提出人们保留了最丰富和最有弹性的物种来建造自己的家园,从而在阿塔卡马的极度干旱中创造了肥沃的绿洲。