Cultivated wetlands and emerging complexity in south-central Chile and long distance effects of climate change

Dillehay, TD; Quivira, MP; Bonzani, R; Silva C.; Wallner, J; le Quesne C.

Abstract

Lands in south-central Chile, long thought to have been marginal until the Spanish conquest, are here shown to have been developing complex societies between at least AD 1000 and 1500. Part of the motor was provided by coastland cultivation on raised platforms, here identified and surveyed for the first time. The authors date the field systems and suggest that they were introduced by farmers from the north seeking wetlands in the face of increasing aridity in the central Andes and southern Amazon.

Más información

Título según WOS: Cultivated wetlands and emerging complexity in south-central Chile and long distance effects of climate change
Título según SCOPUS: Cultivated wetlands and emerging complexity in south-central Chile and long distance effects of climate change
Título de la Revista: ANTIQUITY
Volumen: 81
Número: 314
Editorial: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2007
Página de inicio: 949
Página final: 960
Idioma: English
Notas: ISI, SCOPUS