ANTHROPOLOGY 251 - Peoples of South America

Dr. Jane Granskog

OUTLINE OF GEOGRAPHIC AND CULTURAL AREAS


 

I. Topographical Regions - 3 Zones - Western, Central and Eastern

A. Western Zone - Andean area - Location of pre-Columbian Inca civilization; narrow Andean chain of mountains with three divisions:

1. Northern Andes - Columbia, Equador, part of Peru - wet rainforest (coastal) to highlands; N. Columbia included in Circum-carribean pre-Columbian cultural area characterized by Chibchan chiefdoms; South (Equador, Peru) - part of Northern extension of Inca empire

2. Central Andes - Peru, part of Bolivia - coastal desert (to N. Chile, increasing aridity to S, major population in river valleys); highlands - intermontane grasslands, primary locus of Incan civilization, Quechua & Aymara Indians

3. Southern Andes - Chile - Atacama coastal desert (N), wet, cold archipelago (S); single mountain. chain; simple horticulturalists (Mapuche, Araucanians, s. of Atacama desert, both on coast and in highlands); shellfish foragers in archipelago (Chono, Alacaluf); hunters & gatherers, Tierra del Fuego (Ona, Yaghan)

B. Central Zone - Lowlands, 5 zones ranging from temperate (S) to tropical (N)

1. Patagonia - S. Argentina - high, semi-desert tableland, windy, cold to temperate, hunters and gatherers, Tehuelche

2. Pampas - Argentina, continuation of Patagonia but lower elevation, richer soils, area of guanaco and rhea (ostrich); h. & g, Puelche, Tehuelche

3. Gran Chaco - N. Argentina, Paraguay, S. Bolivia - transitional area, vast plain, wet & dry season, savannah, hot in dry season, swampy during wet season; little habitation, h & g, Mataco, Ache (Guayaki)

4. Amazon Basin - E. flanks of Andes (E. part of Bolivia, Peru, Equador), S. Columbia & Venezuela, major part of Brazil - true tropics, low elevation, heavy rainfall, extensive water drainage sys. for transportation; predominantly. slash & burn horticulture (w/ variable amounts of hunting, fishing, etc.), e.g.: Yanamamo (N), Waiyapi (E), N. Kayapo (SE), Jivaro/Shuar (NW), Amahuaca (W), Mundurucu etc; some foragers (e.g. Siriono/Yuqui in E. Bolivia; Nukak in SE Columbia-NW Amazon)

5. Orinoco Flats - Coastal plains of Venezuela - irregular rainfall, grasslands; few hunting & gathering and simple horticulturalists, Carib, Warao & Arawak

C. Eastern Zone - E. Brazilian Highlands - diverse area, largest highland area characterized by grasslands w/ few trees; sub-tropic climate w/ ample rainfall; pre-Columbian, mostly foragers w/ few horticulturalists because of ample wildlife & flora; Ge-speaking groups, Shavante, Bororo, S. Kayapo, Tupi, Kaingang
 
 

II. Summary of Major Cultural Areas

A. Andean area - major area for present peasant (subsistence agriculture) Indian groups including Quechua and Aymara; sedentary farming villages

B. South (Chilean Archipelago, Pampas, Patagonia), Gran Chaco, E. Brazilian Highlands, E. flanks of Andes - primarily occupied by foragers (hunters & gatherers) during pre-Columbian period; small nomadic bands; few remaining today -- e.g., Siriono/Yuqui in E. Bolivia, Guayaki/Ache in Gran Chaco area

C. Amazonia (see I.B.4) - area of a variety of tribal tropical forest horticulturalists (w/ varying amounts. of hunting & gathering) in sedentary communities; majority of groups, patrilineal w/ ideology of male dominance

D. Circum-Carribean - N. part of Columbia and Venezuela, Greater Antilles - pre-Columbian home of Chibchan, Arawakan, Carib theocratic chiefdoms; practiced intensive irrigation agriculture, stratified class society; high level of warfare; major location of matrilineal cultures in S. America

 
 
Wilsonís Designated Environmental Zones for South America
 

Patagonia

Pampas

Gran Chaco

Brazilian Highlands


Amazon Basin ­ Tropical Rainforest
 

Orinoco Basin
 

Carribbean Littoral


Andes- E-W (1) Andes; (2) Pacific littoral; (3) tropical montana