Upland and Lowland Soil Resources of the Ancient Maya at Tikal, Guatemala

作者:Burnett Richard L; Terry Richard E*; Sweetwood Ryan V; Webster David; Murtha Tim; Silverstein Jay
来源:Soil Science Society of America Journal, 2012, 76(6): 2083-2096.
DOI:10.2136/sssaj2010.0224

摘要

Debate over agricultural methods and productivity during the Preclassic and Classic Maya period (1000 BCE to 900 CE) focuses on the agronomic utility of both upland and lowland soil resources of the karst topography characteristic of northern Guatemala and much of the Yucatan peninsula. In settings where direct evidence of agriculture is sparse, stable carbon (C) isotope evidence from soil organic matter (SOM) provides information on past vegetation changes related to ancient maize agriculture. Areas of ancient sustained maize cultivation can be identified in an ecosystem dominated by C-3 forest vegetation because of the unique C-4 photosynthetic pathway of maize. The decomposition of plant materials with divergent photosynthetic mechanisms (C-3 versus C-4) results in SOM with correspondingly distinct stable C isotope ratios (delta C-13). Such differences are preserved and detectable within the refractory humin fraction of the SOM. This study analyzes the physical and chemical soil properties including stable C isotopes of soils collected from upland and lowland locations near Tikal, Guatemala. Toes lope soils contained strong isotopic evidence of C4 vegetation likely the result of ancient maize agriculture, while the evidence from shallow soils of the summit and backslopes was less conclusive. In both upland and lowland contexts, however, the stronger evidence of ancient vegetation shifts associated with maize agriculture was found in the deeper fine-textured soils in the footslopes and toeslopes. Examination of soils on toeslopes revealed evidence of deposition from erosional processes upslope that may have been related to the spread of agriculture to less productive soils over time.

  • 出版日期2012-12