Rethinking the Andes-Amazonia Divide : : a cross-disciplinary exploration / / edited by Adrian J. Pearce, David G. Beresford-Jones, Paul Heggarty.

Rethinking the Andes-Amazonia Divide brings together archaeologists, linguists, geneticists, anthropologists, ethnohistorians and historians to explore the meeting of the Andes and Amazonia, from deepest prehistory up to the European colonial period.

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Bibliographic Details
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Place / Publishing House:London, England : : UCL Press,, 2020.
Year of Publication:2020
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (366 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • List of figures
  • List of tables
  • List of Contributors
  • Introduction to maps and sources
  • Geographical base maps
  • Point locations: Mountain peaks, cities, settlements, archaeological sites
  • Geographical/environmental
  • Archaeological/historical
  • Language distributions
  • Introduction. Why Andes-Amazonia? Why cross-disciplinary?
  • Andes-Amazonia: What it means, why it matters
  • A case study in environmental determinism
  • Reality, myth or scholarly tradition? When is a divide not a divide? Andes-Amazonia interactions
  • Clarifications: 'Andes' and 'Amazonia', geography and culture
  • The broader context to this interdisciplinary project
  • Structure of this book
  • Chapter summaries
  • Part 1. Crossing frontiers: Perspectives from the various disciplines
  • Part 2. Deep time and the long chronological perspective
  • Part 3. Overall patterns and alternative models
  • Part 4. Regional case studies from the Altiplano and southern Upper Amazonia
  • Part 5. Age of Empires: Inca and Spanish colonial perspectives Part 1 Crossing frontiers: Perspectives from the various disciplines
  • 1.1 Archaeology A transect across the Andes-Amazonia divide Archaeology in South America The problem of chronology From chronology to explanation The application of archaeological science Andes-Amazonia: A new archaeological orthodoxy? Conclusions
  • 1.2 Linguistics Language lessons on the Andes-Amazonia divide Language families: Origins, expansions, migrations and divergence Contact and linguistic areas: Interaction and convergence out of diverse origins Confusions and clarifications: Divergent families versus convergent areas Linguistics and genetics, classification and admixture Definitions and circularities? The linguistic perspective: Potential, limitations and prospects
  • 1.3 Genetics Genetic markers Ancient DNA Genetic diversity in South America Genetics and cross-cultural interactions
  • 1.4 Anthropology Chavín de Huántar San Agustín The 'geoglyphs' of the Upper Purús The Kallawaya Conclusion
  • 1.5 The Andes-Amazonia culture area Part 2 Deep time and the long chronological perspective 2.1 Initial east and west connections across South America Terminal Pleistocene and Early Holocene: ~15,000-8000 cal bp Incipient farming Genetic and craniometric evidence Early to Middle Holocene Epilogue
  • 2.2 The Andes-Amazonia divide and human morphological diversification in South America
  • 2.3 Deep time and first settlement: What, if anything, can linguistics tell us?
  • 1. Deep time and first settlement
  • 2. What is so wrong with Greenberg's 'Amerind', 'Andean' and 'Equatorial'?
  • 3. Other linguistic misreadings on an Andes-Amazonia divide.