Sobre a autora
A colaboradora Denise Schaan, da UFPA, anuncia a publicação
do artigo "Long-Term Human Induced Impacts on Marajó Island Landscapes,
Amazon Estuary", na edição especial do períodico Diversity "Long-Term
Anthropic Influences on the Diversity of Amazonian Landscapes and Biota".
Schaan D. Long-Term Human Induced
Impacts on Marajó Island Landscapes, Amazon Estuary. Diversity. 2010;
2(2):182-206.
Abstract
Archaeology is a discipline that can
offer a long term perspective on the impacts human societies have had on the
environment. Landscape studies are critical for understanding these impacts,
because they embrace a dialectical view regarding the relationship between
humans and their immediate surroundings. Such studies are well suited to the
Amazon basin, a region that has driven much media attention due to astonishing
rates of deforestation in certain areas, with likely consequences on the
planet’s climate, posing challenges to the survival of the human species for the
coming decades. In fact, although much has been said about the impacts of
contemporary societies on tropical forest environments, ancient landscape
management practices have not yet been considered part of the equation. Thus
far, we know that Amerindian societies have been actively transforming their
surroundings for millennia. On the eve of European contact, large, complex
societies were bringing about long-lasting transformations of landscapes
throughout the basin. Conquest and colonization resulted in epidemics,
enslavement, and changes to the indigenous economies that managed to survive the
genocide. Afterwards, as colonizers would exploit traditional resources leading,
in many instances, to their exhaustion, a huge quantity of information on
sustainable ways of dealing with certain environments became lost. Traditional
knowledge, however, still survives among certain indigenous, peasant (caboclo),
and African-Brazilian populations. Documentation of surviving management
practices together with the study of the archaeological record could provide
valuable information for policy makers. This article examines historical
transformations that took place on Marajó Island during the last two millennia
and advocates the importance of archaeological research for understanding the
historical ecology of landscape change. It is argued that ancient economic
strategies, some still being practiced today, could be re-created in the
present, since these may constitute opportunities for sustainable sources of
income to local communities.
To view the complete article, please
visit the following link:
http://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/2/2/182/
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Antropologia, Universidade Federal do Pará,
Rua Augusto Correa, 1–CEP 66075-110–Belém, PA, Brazil.
deniseschaan@marajoara.com