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Peruvian Desert Once a Breadbasket
Discovery News ^ | Tuesday, August 16, 2011 | Tim Wall

Posted on 08/16/2011 7:25:40 PM PDT by SunkenCiv

Throughout human history unsustainable agricultural practices have turned fragile ecosystems into wastelands and left people starving. During the Dust Bowl, American farmers learned the consequences of removing the deep rooted grasses from the Great Plains when the soil blew away in tremendous dust storms. Icelandic shepherds learned that the sheep rearing practices their ancestors used on the European mainland destroyed the thin soils of their island and left them with starving herds and little to eat.

The ancient inhabitants of what is now Peru also learned the unhappy consequences of farming in a delicate ecosystem. The Ica Valley, near the coast of southern Peru and the famous Nazca lines, is now a barren desert, but was once a fertile floodplain, anchored by the roots of the huarango tree.

People were able to raise a variety of crops there for several centuries. But intensive agriculture in pre-conquest times led to ecosystem collapse. The history of the land was recently reconstructed by bioarcheologist David Beresford-Jones of the University of Cambridge by looking at plant remains left in ancient garbage heaps.

Beresford-Jones and a team of archeologists studied plant remains associated with settlement sites spanning roughly 750 B.C. to 1000 A.D. They observed the change as the valley inhabitants went from eating mostly gathered foods, to a period of intense agriculture, then back again to surviving on what they could eke out of nature's diminished bounty.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.discovery.com ...


TOPICS: History; Science; Travel
KEYWORDS: andes; godsgravesglyphs; peru
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To: Hot Tabasco

Thanks Hot Tabasco.


41 posted on 08/17/2011 8:39:47 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Yes, as a matter of fact, it is that time again -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: SunkenCiv

There can be no doubt that this was caused by a global warming caused by human use of carbon fuels.

Further, Bush was the principal villain in the whole thing.


42 posted on 08/17/2011 8:57:08 PM PDT by wildbill (You're just jealous because the Voices talk only to me.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
The Neolithic revolution [of] Euro-Asia was animal based...In the Americas there was a dearth of usable animals to domesticate so the Neolithic revolution was plant based.

Very interesting.

43 posted on 08/17/2011 11:34:15 PM PDT by stripes1776
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