Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/681261
Title: Site formation processes at Hatahara and their implications for understanding the archaeology of the Central Amazon region.
Authors: REBELLATO, L.
NEVES, E. G.
TEIXEIRA, W. G.
WOODS, W. I.
Affiliation: LILIAN REBELLATO, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS; EDUARDO G. NEVES, USP/MUSEU DE ARQUEOLOGIA E ETNOLOGIA; WENCESLAU GERALDES TEIXEIRA, CPAA; WILLIAM I. WOODS, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS.
Date Issued: 2008
Citation: In: WORLD ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONGRESS, 6., 2008, Dublin Ireland. Geoarchaeology and dark earths. Doublin: WAC-6, 2008.
Description: To understand archaeological site formation it is necessary to take into account a wide spectrum of natural and human processes, including intentional and unintentional changes and post-depositional events. Through the Hatahara case study, an archaeological site located in the central Amazon near Manaus, Brazil, it was possible to determine numerous factors that had affected the site?s depositional history. Through analysis of the distribution and characteristics of terra preta, terra mulata, ceramics and the topography of this site, it was possible to understand dark earth formation and differential use through time. As a result this investigation opened a new vision about village morphology in pre-European Amazonia.
Thesagro: Solo
NAL Thesaurus: terra preta
Keywords: Terra Mulata
Arqueologia
Brasil
Amazonas
Type of Material: Separatas
Access: openAccess
Appears in Collections:Artigo em anais de congresso (CPAA)

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