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Disentangling the last 1,000 years of human–environment interactions along the eastern side of the southern Andes (34–52°S lat.)

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Significance Understanding how people have shaped landscapes requires detailed information on past changes in climate, vegetation, fire, and land use. The environmental and human history of four sites along the… Click to show full abstract

Significance Understanding how people have shaped landscapes requires detailed information on past changes in climate, vegetation, fire, and land use. The environmental and human history of four sites along the eastern Andes of southern South America (34–52°S) shows the changing influence of people and climate on landscape development over the last millennia. Initially, burning by hunter-gatherers and climate variability shaped forest, shrubland, and grassland mosaics. Widespread alteration of fire regimes and vegetation ∼400 y ago is attributed to increased Native American pastoralism prior to extensive Euro-American settlement. Late-19th century ranching and logging led to broadscale changes in fire activity and vegetation across the region. These high-resolution, landscape-scale reconstructions reveal complex human–environment interactions that are often overlooked in regional-to-global syntheses.

Keywords: human environment; along eastern; environment interactions; disentangling last; last 000

Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Year Published: 2022

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