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Plantscapes of dwelling : Precolonial household mounds, phytocultural dynamics and the ensuing human ecosystems at El Flaco and El Carril (cal. AD 990–1450), northern Dominican Republic
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- Investigación ambiental [1462]
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Show full item recordAbstract: | Caribbean Amerindian societies had sophisticated regional socio-political and economic systems linked to important crops by the late 15th century when Spanish conquerors initiated the invasion of the Americas. These systems soon helped change the dynamics of the world's foodways, and scarce but mounting archaeological and ethnohistoric evidence suggests that the Spaniards and later European intruders gained symbolic and factual control of primary subsistence scenarios in the region by exploiting the Amerindians' plant foodways systems, lands and political institutions. The aim of this study is to better understand the emergence and evolution of human–plant interrelationships before 1492, and the role which this played in the consolidation of foodways systems that later benefitted early European survival and domination in the Americas. |
Author(s): | Pagán-Jiménez, Jaime R.
Ali, Zara Santiago-Marrero, Carlos G. Hofman, Corinne L. |
Date: | 2020 |
Published: | Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 274, 104160 |
Citation: | Pagán-Jiménez, J. R., Ali, Z., Santiago-Marrero, C. G., & Hofman, C. L. (2020). Plantscapes of dwelling: Precolonial household mounds, phytocultural dynamics and the ensuing human ecosystems at El Flaco and El Carril (cal. AD 990–1450), northern Dominican Republic. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 274, 104160. Recuperado de: |
URI: | https://bvearmb.do/handle/123456789/1454
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