Soils in ancient irrigated agricultural terraces in the Atacama desert, Chile
Author
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Sandor, Jonathan A.
Author
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Huckleberry, Gary
Author
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Hayashida, Frances M.
Author
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Parcero Oubiña, César
Author
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Salazar, Diego
Author
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Troncoso, Andrés
Author
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Ferro-Vázquez, Cruz
Admission date
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2022-01-28T13:43:04Z
Available date
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2022-01-28T13:43:04Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2021
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
Geoarchaeology-an International Journal (2021) 37:1 Págs. 96-119
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Identifier
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10.1002/gea.21834
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/183892
Abstract
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The Atacama Desert is among the driest places on Earth, yet ancient agricultural
systems are present in the region. Here, we present a study of terraced agricultural
soils in the high‐altitude eastern margin of the Atacama Desert in northern Chile,
mainly dating to the Late Intermediate Period (ca. 950–1400 AD) and Inka period
(ca. 1400–1536 AD). Terraced fields were compartmentalized to distribute limited
irrigation water originating mainly from springs. Natural soils used for agriculture
are mostly Aridisols developed on Pleistocene alluvial fan terraces and hillslopes
underlain by volcanic bedrock. One research objective is to evaluate long‐term soil
change from agriculture. In this hyperarid climate, agriculture is only possible with
irrigation, so natural soils on the same geomorphic surface adjacent to irrigated soils
provide baseline data for assessing anthropogenic soil change. Data from soil profiles
and surface transects indicate intentional soil change through terracing, removal
of soil rock fragments, and probable fertilization. Agricultural soils have
anthropogenic horizons ranging from 16 to 54 cm thick. Most agricultural soils have
higher phosphorus levels, suggesting enrichment from fertilization. Changes in soil
organic carbon and nitrogen are also evident. Unintentional anthropogenic soil
change resulted from CaCO3 input through irrigation with calcareous spring water.
Initial studies suggest that agriculture here was sustainable in the sense of conserving
soils, and maintaining and possibly improving soil productivity over
centuries.
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Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica de Chile CONICYT-USA 2013-0012
National Science Foundation (NSF) OISE-1265816
National Geographic Society 9296-13
Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research
University of New Mexico Latin American and Iberian Institute
Spanish Ministry of Culture (Actuaciones Arqueologicas en el Exterior)
Spanish Government HAR2017-87951-R
School for Advanced Research (Research Team Seminar)
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Wiley
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Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States