An artificial landscape-scale fishery in the Bolivian Amazon

Historical ecologists working in the Neotropics argue that the present natural environment is an historical product of human intentionality and ingenuity, a creation that is imposed, built, managed and maintained by the collective multigenerational knowledge and experience of Native Americans. In the past 12,000 years, indigenous peoples transformed the environment, creating what we now recognize as the rich ecological mosaic of the Neotropics. The prehispanic savanna peoples of the Bolivian Amazon built an anthropogenic landscape through the construction of raised fields, large settlement mounds, and earthen causeways. I have studied a complex artificial network of hydraulic earthworks covering 525 km 2 in the Baures region of Bolivia. Here I identify a particular form of earthwork, the zigzag structure, as a fish weir, on the basis of form, orientation, location, association with other hydraulic works and ethnographic analogy. The native peoples used this technology to harvest sufficient animal protein to sustain large and dense populations in a savanna environment.

[1]  P. Stahl HOLOCENE BIODIVERSITY: An Archaeological Perspective from the Americas , 1996 .

[2]  Clark L. Erickson Archaeological Methods for the Study of Ancient Landscapes of the Llanos de Mojos in the Bolivian Amazon , 1995 .

[3]  B. Chernoff,et al.  Paleoindian Cave Dwellers in the Amazon: The Peopling of the Americas , 1996, Science.

[4]  W. Balée,et al.  Resource management in Amazonia: indigenous and folk strategies , 1989 .

[5]  W. Denevan The Pristine Myth: The Landscape of the Americas in 1492 , 1992 .

[6]  S. Beckerman The Abundance of Protein in Amazonia: A Reply to Gross , 1979 .

[7]  Sterling Evans Advances in Historical Ecology. Edited by William Balee. New York: Columbia University Press, 1998. xvi + 429 pp. Maps, tables, notes, references, list of contributors, index. $65.00 , 1999 .

[8]  E. Nordenskiöld The Ethnography of South America seen from Mojos in Bolivia , 1925, Nature.

[9]  Dolores R. Piperno,et al.  The Origins of Agriculture in the Lowland Neotropics , 1998 .

[10]  A. Garson Comment upon the Economic Potential of Fish Utilization in Riverine Environments and Potential Archaeological Biases , 1980, American Antiquity.

[11]  F. Eder,et al.  Breve descripción de las reducciones de Mojos , 1985 .

[12]  N. Smith The Amazon River Forest: A Natural History of Plants, Animals, and People , 1999 .

[13]  H. Moholy-Nagy The Utilization of Pomacea Snails at Tikal, Guatemala , 1978, American Antiquity.

[14]  W. Denevan,et al.  The aboriginal cultural geography of the Llanos de Mojos of Bolivia , 1966 .

[15]  Jürgen Riester,et al.  Los Guarasug'wé : crónica de sus últimos días , 1977 .