Dados do autor | |
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Nome | Francis Mayle |
E-mail do autor | Email hidden; Javascript is required. |
Sua instituição | University of Reading |
Sua titulação | Pós-Doutorado |
País de origem do autor | Reino Unido |
Dados co-autor(es) [Máximo de 2 co-autores] | |
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Nome completo | Eduardo Goes Neves |
País de origem do co-autor | Brasil |
Instituição | University of Sao Paulo USP |
Proposta de Paper | |
Área Temática | 02. Arqueologia |
Grupo Temático | Historia indígena de larga duración en los dos mayores sistemas fluviales de Sudamérica: las cuencas del Amazonas y del Plata |
Título | Overview of the HERCA project: Human-Environment Relationships in pre-Columbian Amazonia |
Resumo | The dynamics of past human-environment relationships in Amazonia is one of the most relevant issues in archaeology today. Recent ground-breaking discoveries of sedentary, stratified, pre-Columbian societies have overturned the paradigm that environmental constraints limited cultural development in Amazonia to semi-nomadic, hunter-gatherer lifestyles, as practiced by indigenous peoples today. However, the process by which these stratified societies emerged and declined, and their relationships with the environment, remain unresolved. The HERCA project is jointly funded by the UK (AHRC) and Brazil (FAPESP) and seeks to address this problem by assembling an international, inter-disciplinary, team of researchers from UK, European, Brazilian, and Bolivian institutions. The overall aim is to determine the relationships between the emergence and demise of stratified societies, food procurement strategies, and environmental conditions in Pre-Columbian Amazonia. |
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