Amazon Rainforest Culivated For Cacao,Forest Crops Or Maybe Not
Unfortunately one of our best potential living 'informants' or witnesses for otr against the ancient forest farming theory advavnced by acacdemics below 'can tell no tales' because they were systematically rounded up and massacred first on a large scale by 19th and early 20th century rubber barrons hoping to strike it rich on their slave labor and dead bodies.More recently the were rounded up and massacred by the ;Christian' Summerhill Linguistic Institute and New Tribes Missions in the recent post WWII era for both the CIA and its multi-national oil and mineral corporation clients as well as by the governments in Brazil,Peru,Ecuador,etc. where the Amazon or remants of the Amazon remain.
Had the Spanish conquistadors have 'discovered' Preu and the Inca only and not the Aztecs and Maya et.al. of Mexico and Meso America it would be unlokely they would have ever brought Cacao or chocolate back to Europe to be used as a drink because the Inca and oth South American peoples living on the coast and mountain regions of Pacific coast South America don=t appear to have had the cultural habit of drinking or even using the Theobroma cacao plant at all and it appears to have remained only in the Amazon region virtually unknown to to complex agrarian stone monument builders of the Pacific coast.
The article below even includes the disclaimer that any truly ancient cultivation of cacao and other indigenous tree crops can't be proven and many of the changes or apparent changed such as number of
tree crops used and popular today may have indeed been planted in more recent times.........
Both Threobroma cacao and Threobroma bicolor have been cultivated and at least semi domesticated in Meso America by the Olmecs,Maya et.al. and are both mentioned in the Mayan Popul Vu that was written down in Spanish after the Conquest.Both appear to have had their origens in the Amazon and somehow got transplanted or transported to Mexico and at least northern Central America from there somehow. Yucca or manioc that was impotant to Meso Americans may also have an Amazon origen or coincidentally was cultivated independentally from different wild sources existing in both places.....
San Andrés (Mesoamerican site) - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Andrés_(Mesoamerican_site)
Maize: Origin, Domestication, and its Role in the Development of Culture
https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1139619942
Duccio Bonavia - 2013 - Social Science
... with farmers in the Amazon basin, where DNA evidence suggests that manioc was ... Yucca remains, albeit somewhat later ones, were also found in Belize that dated to ... 896; emphasis added) stated in this regard: “Manioc was previously thought to have been domesticated in both Mesoamerica and South America, butYucca (manioc) - Deep in the Venezuelan Amazon - Easyvoyage UK
www.easyvoyage.co.uk › Special feature
Yucca (manioc) - Deep in the Venezuelan Amazon , an editorial feature by ... the manioc is put in a woven basket made from Jacitara palm tree bark called ...
Chicha - an ancestral beverage to feed body and soul | Sounds and ...
https://soundsandcolours.com/.../chicha-an-ancestral-beverage-to-feed-body-and-soul...
Amazon rainforest was shaped by an ancient hunger for fruits and nuts ...
www.nature.com/.../amazon-rainforest-was-shaped-by-an-ancient-hunger-for-fruits-and-...
4 days ago - Domesticated palm plants stick up through the canopy in the Amazon rainforest. ... Levis and her team used data from the Amazon Tree Diversity ... as Brazil nuts (Bertholletia excelsa) and cocoa plants (Theobroma cacao), ...Hundreds of years later, plants domesticated by ancient civilizations ...
www.sciencemag.org/.../hundreds-years-later-plants-domesticated-ancient-civilization...
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/amazon-rainforest-was-shaped-by-an-ancient-hunger-for-fruits-and-nuts/
Amazon Rainforest Was Shaped by an Ancient Hunger for Fruits and Nuts
People living in the area thousands of years ago may have changed the forest around them in ways that are still visible today
The Amazon has long been held up as an example of untamed wilderness. But people have lived in the world’s largest rainforest for thousands of years, hunting, gathering and farming. For years, researchers have debated how much of an influence human activities have had on the Amazon. And now, a study describes the extent to which ancient peoples changed the distribution of trees in the forest around them.
The paper, published on March 2 in Science, finds that many domesticated trees and palms are five times more likely to be over-represented in the Amazon than are non-domesticated ones. The researchers also found that the domesticated plants tended to cluster around the remains of pre-Columbian settlements—or areas where people lived prior to the arrival of Christopher Columbus. They suggest that this pattern could help other scientists to discover as yet unknown ancient settlements in the Amazon.
“It’s not enough to study the environmental conditions that structure these communities of trees and palms,” says Carolina Levis, a palaeoecologist at Wageningen University in the Netherlands and the lead author of the study. “We need to ask ‘what are the human influences in these communities?’”
The researchers wanted to know whether this was because of human influence or the environment. So they compared the distribution of domesticated species to more than 3,000 known pre-Columbian archaeological sites and likely settlement areas, including near the banks of rivers. Domesticated species were much more likely to thrive where ancient people had lived than were non-domesticated species.
All told, about 20% of the distribution of domesticated species across the Amazon seemed to be driven by human influences, while 30% was likely due to environmental factors such as soil composition. However, in the southwestern Amazon—which hosted large pre-Columbian populations—about 30% of the distribution of domesticated species stemmed from human activities. Less than 10% was due to environmental conditions.
Human actions could also have created conditions that favoured domesticated plants over their wild brethren, says Mark Bush, an ecologist at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne. And the domesticated species could re-colonize disturbed areas more easily than non-domesticated ones without any help from people.
When people abandoned Mayan sites in Central America, Brosimum trees re-colonized the area. But for years, researchers thought the Mayans had planted them deliberately. Levis and her team could be observing a similar phenomenon, Bush says.
Levis acknowledges that their study didn’t separate out the effects of modern peoples from their ancestors. But Bush and McMichael agree that irrespective of the cause, the distribution of plants in the Amazon follows modern and ancient human settlements. Levis and McMichael are in the process of developing a model to use that pattern to find areas where people may have lived thousands of years ago.
Ultimately, says Levis, this research shows that the Amazon is not an untamed jungle, but an ecosystem that humans have been a part of for ages, and their actions have left their mark on the land.
“People want to preserve pristine forests for conservation and to preserve life,” she says. “But if this is true, if people enriched the forests by domesticating palms, that is also a cultural artefact.” The trees that live in these populated areas may be relics of a vibrant past.
This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on March 2, 2017.
The paper, published on March 2 in Science, finds that many domesticated trees and palms are five times more likely to be over-represented in the Amazon than are non-domesticated ones. The researchers also found that the domesticated plants tended to cluster around the remains of pre-Columbian settlements—or areas where people lived prior to the arrival of Christopher Columbus. They suggest that this pattern could help other scientists to discover as yet unknown ancient settlements in the Amazon.
“It’s not enough to study the environmental conditions that structure these communities of trees and palms,” says Carolina Levis, a palaeoecologist at Wageningen University in the Netherlands and the lead author of the study. “We need to ask ‘what are the human influences in these communities?’”
A cornucopia
Levis and her team used data from the Amazon Tree Diversity Network—a group of researchers who share information on palms and trees in the Amazon—to estimate biodiversity in the rainforest. So far, scientists in the network have identified 4,962 palm and tree species in the Amazon. Of the 85 domesticated woody species, Levis discovered that about 20 of them, such as Brazil nuts (Bertholletia excelsa) and cocoa plants (Theobroma cacao), were over-represented.The researchers wanted to know whether this was because of human influence or the environment. So they compared the distribution of domesticated species to more than 3,000 known pre-Columbian archaeological sites and likely settlement areas, including near the banks of rivers. Domesticated species were much more likely to thrive where ancient people had lived than were non-domesticated species.
All told, about 20% of the distribution of domesticated species across the Amazon seemed to be driven by human influences, while 30% was likely due to environmental factors such as soil composition. However, in the southwestern Amazon—which hosted large pre-Columbian populations—about 30% of the distribution of domesticated species stemmed from human activities. Less than 10% was due to environmental conditions.
Old versus new
This doesn’t necessarily mean that ancient human actions were solely responsible for the distribution of domesticated plants, cautions Crystal McMichael, a palaeoecologist at the University of Amsterdam. “It’s quite well known that ancient people and modern people both settle in similar areas.” So it’s possible that more modern groups influenced the ecosystems we see today as much as ancient ones, she adds.Human actions could also have created conditions that favoured domesticated plants over their wild brethren, says Mark Bush, an ecologist at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne. And the domesticated species could re-colonize disturbed areas more easily than non-domesticated ones without any help from people.
When people abandoned Mayan sites in Central America, Brosimum trees re-colonized the area. But for years, researchers thought the Mayans had planted them deliberately. Levis and her team could be observing a similar phenomenon, Bush says.
Levis acknowledges that their study didn’t separate out the effects of modern peoples from their ancestors. But Bush and McMichael agree that irrespective of the cause, the distribution of plants in the Amazon follows modern and ancient human settlements. Levis and McMichael are in the process of developing a model to use that pattern to find areas where people may have lived thousands of years ago.
Ultimately, says Levis, this research shows that the Amazon is not an untamed jungle, but an ecosystem that humans have been a part of for ages, and their actions have left their mark on the land.
“People want to preserve pristine forests for conservation and to preserve life,” she says. “But if this is true, if people enriched the forests by domesticating palms, that is also a cultural artefact.” The trees that live in these populated areas may be relics of a vibrant past.
This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on March 2, 2017.
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