St?phen Rostains book is a culmination of 25 years of research on the extensive human modification of the wetlands environment of Guiana and how it reshapes our thinking of ancient settlement in lowland South America and other tropical zones. Rostain demonstrates that populations were capable of developing intensive raised-field agriculture, which supported significant human density, and construct causeways, habitation mounds, canals, and reservoirs to meet their needs. The work is comparative in every sense, drawing on ethnology, ethnohistory, ecology, and geography; contrasting island Guiana with other wetland regions around the world; and examining millennia of pre-Columbian settlement and colonial occupation alike. Rostains work demands a radical rethinking of conventional wisdom about settlement in tropical lowlands and landscape management by its inhabitants over the course of millennia.
'The culmination of 25 years of research on the extensive human modification of the wetlands environment of Guiana, this book demands a radical rethinking of conventional wisdom about settlemtn and landscape management in tropical lowlands over millennia.
St?phen Rostain is not only a remarkable field archaeologist, he is also a comparativist with broad perspectives and a solid erudition which have made him an authority in the still embryonic field of Amazonian archaeology, and more widely on the theme of sustainable development in tropical-forest environments.<br>From the Foreword by Philippe Descola
In this insightful book, Rostain (director of research, CNRS, France) provides a new contribution with a rich perspective on how American Indians modified their landscape to increase food production and maintain high populations in the Guiana region. He presents an extensive review of different forms of earthworks in the New World and other parts of the world with an innovative taxonomy and detailed description of all the knolÏ