American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)—Scientists have uncovered traces of an expansive fish-trapping network created by ancient Mesoamericans in what is now modern-day Belize. Located in an incredibly biodiverse wetland, this extensive system provided Archaic hunter-gatherer-fishers with significant food and likely supported the rise of Mayan civilization in the following Formative period. Belize’s Crooked Tree Wildlife Sanctuary (CTWS) has a 10,000-year-long record of human occupation that began in the Archaic Period around 8000 BCE to 1800 BCE and included the Formative Period from 1800 BCE to 150 CE. Using drones and Google Earth imagery, Eleanor Harrison-Buck and colleagues discovered an ancient and vast network of earthen channels used by ancient Mesoamericans for fish trapping. They also excavated 3 of these channels for radiocarbon dating. Evidence indicated that Archaic and Late Archaic hunter-gatherer-fishers built this network, which were subsequently used by the Maya to harvest fish. Notably, these channels predate similar ones in Amazonia by 1,000 years. Harrison-Buck et al. saw signs of a centuries-long drought in excavated sediment samples that started in 2200 BCE. They argue that the drought might have shifted societal focus from maize-based agriculture to aquatic food production. They calculate that the CTWS network could have yielded enough fish to feed around 15,000 people annually. “To be clear, we are not claiming that 15,000 people were congregating at any one time in the CTWS during the Late Archaic. However, there is evidence for such population growth in the Maya area by Middle to Late Formative times,” the authors note. “Fisheries were more than capable of supporting year-round sedentarism and the emergence of complex society characteristic of Pre-Columbian Maya civilization in this area.”
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Article Source: AAAS news release.
*Late Archaic Large-Scale Fisheries in the Wetlands of the Pre-Columbian Maya Lowlands, Science Advances, 22-Nov-2024. 10.1126/sciadv.adq1444
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