Humans settled in southwestern Amazonia and even experimented with agriculture much earlier than previously thought, according to an international team of researchers.
![]() |
Excavations at the site of La Chacra [Credit: José Capriles, PSU] |
The archaeological team conducted its study on three forest islands -- Isla del Tesoro, La Chacra and San Pablo -- within the seasonally flooded savanna of the Llanos de Moxos in northern Bolivia.
![]() |
Excavation team taking measurements during excavations [Credit: José Capriles, PSU] |
The team's excavations of the forest islands revealed human skeletons that had been intentionally buried in a manner unlike that of typical hunter gatherers and instead were more akin to the behaviours of complex societies -- characterized by political hierarchy and the production of food. Their results appear in Science Advances.
![]() |
Samples collected from the excavation site [Credit: José Capriles, PSU] |
Capriles noted that it is rare to find human or even archaeological remains that predate the use of fired pottery in the region.
![]() |
Collection of sedimentary cores in the forest island San Pablo, in the picture, Dr. Umberto Lombardo [Credit: José Capriles, PSU] |
According to Umberto Lombardo, earth scientist at the University of Bern, when the researchers first published their discovery of these archaeological sites in 2013, they had to base their conclusions on indirect evidence -- mostly geochemical analyses -- rather than direct evidence such as artifacts.
![]() |
Human burials exposed and recovered during the archaeological excavations at the forest island of La Chacra during excavations [Credit: José Capriles, PSU] |
Capriles noted that the human bones on these forest islands were preserved despite the poor conditions because they were encased within middens -- or trash heaps -- containing abundant fragments of shell, animal bones and other organic remains.
![]() |
Burial in La Chacra exposed during archaeological excavations [Credit: José Capriles, PSU] |
Because the human bones were fossilized, the team was unable to date them directly using radiocarbon dating. Instead, they used radiocarbon dating of associated charcoal and shell as a proxy for estimating the time range that the sites were occupied.
![]() |
Mapping during the archaeological excavations at the site of La Chacra [Credit: José Capriles, PSU] |
According to Capriles, a gap exists between the people his team studied who lived on the forest islands between 10,000 and 4,000 years ago and the rise of complex societies, which began around 2,500 years ago.
![]() |
View of La Chacra forest island in the Bolivian Llanos de Moxos [Credit: José Capriles/PSU] |
Capriles added, "Are the people we found direct predecessors of those later, more complex societies? There are still questions to be answered and we hope to do so in future research."
Source: Pennsylvania State University [April 24, 2019]
No comments: