Authors
Sandra O Brugger, Erika Gobet, Jacqueline FN van Leeuwen, Marie-Pierre Ledru, Daniele Colombaroli, Willem Oscar van der Knaap, Umberto Lombardo, Katerine Escobar-Torrez, Walter Finsinger, Leonor Rodrigues, Alena Giesche, Modesto Zarate, Heinz Veit, Willy Tinner
Publication date
2016/1/15
Source
Quaternary Science Reviews
Volume
132
Pages
114-128
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Only few studies documenting the vegetation history of the Llanos de Moxos, one of the largest seasonally flooded wetland areas in South America, are available and little is known about the environmental impact of pre-Columbian settlements. We use radiocarbon-dated terrestrial plant macrofossils to establish a sound chronology and palynological analyses to reconstruct the vegetation and fire history of the Lago Rogaguado area. The sedimentary pollen and spore record suggests that wetland and wooded savannah (Cerrado) environments occurred around the lake between 8100 and 5800 cal BP. Fire activity was high during this period and was probably connected to the dry Cerrado environments. The pollen evidence suggests early plant cultivation (Zea mays, Annonaceae and Cucurbitaceae) from 6500 cal BP onwards, which is significantly earlier than hitherto assumed for Amazonia. Gallery forests …
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