SAN FRANCISCO -- The arid Atacama Desert, thought to be a barrier to early South American settlers, may have held lakes large enough to sustain small human populations, according to new research presented here today. The lakes' presence challenges the current understanding of the paths early settlers took to explore and settle South America, according to the researchers.
Chile's Atacama Desert spans roughly 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) along South America's western coast. The desert is sandwiched between two mountain ranges, which prevent water from reaching its valleys and salt flats, making it the world's driest location outside the poles.
Now, new research shows standing water may have existed in the heart of the Atacama. Scientists recently discovered remnants of freshwater plants and animals buried in the sediment of the desert's salt flats: the large stretches of dry, salty soil that pepper the Atacama Desert. Many of the flats span 600 to 1,000 square meters (6,400 to 10,400 square feet), though some are larger. Radiocarbon analysis showed the freshwater lakes and wetlands existed in the desert between 9,000 and 25,000 years ago, according to the researchers.
Many archeologists believe South America's early settlers traveled from the west coast inland toward the Andean Mountains, avoiding the desert's dry center by walking along its wetter edges. But the new findings suggest the Atacama's ancient lakes could have provided another path through the desert, and possibly even homes for South American settlers.
"The implication is that a landscape previously thought to be uninhabitable was actually an important stepping-stone for colonization of South America," said Marco Pfeiffer, a soil scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, and lead author of the new study. Pfeiffer will present the study's results today at the 2016 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting.
When Pfeiffer and his colleagues dug into the salt flats, they discovered organic material left by freshwater plants, snails and microorganisms. Radiocarbon dating suggested those organisms lived after one or more wet climate cycles, known as the Central Andean Pluvial Events.
Pfeiffer said the climate cycles likely brought rain from the Andes down to the water-starved soil of the Atacama Desert, creating the lakes and wetlands. Even populations of guanaco, the undomesticated parent of the modern llama, may have once thrived near the Atacama's ancient water bodies, he added. When the climate cycles ended, the lakes and wetlands transitioned from fresh to saltwater before completely disappearing several thousand years later, Pfeiffer said.
Pfeiffer said the new findings could help guide future archaeological expeditions. Only three archaeological sites within the desert have been searched for evidence of human settlement, all of which stand near streams. Pfeiffer believes the Atacama Desert holds a "rich, early archaeological record remaining to be discovered and analyzed."
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Media Q&A and presentation information
The researcher, Marco Pfeiffer, will be available to answer questions from members of the news media during a media availability from 8:30 - 9:00 a.m. PT today in the Press Conference Room, Moscone West, Room 3000. The media availability will also be streamed live over the web. Information about how to stream press conferences can be found here.
The researchers will present a poster about their work on Thursday, 15 December 2016 at the AGU Fall Meeting.
Poster Title: Wetlands and Paleolakes in the Hyperarid Atacama Desert During the Late Quaternary and Their Implications for Early Human Occupation of South America
Session: PP43B: Recent Advances in Lakes and Lacustrine Material: Responses to Regional Climate and Environmental Change II Posters
Date: Thursday, 15 December 2016
Time: 1:40 - 6:00 p.m.
Abstract number: PP43B-2321
Location: Moscone South, Poster Hall
Contact information for the researcher: Marco Pfeiffer: mpfeiffer@berkeley.edu , +1 (510) 612-3783
2. Today's press events
8:30 a.m. - A new understanding of South American settlement (Media Q&A)
9:00 a.m. - New research on the ionosphere, our interface to space
11:30 a.m. - Thomas Zurbuchen (Media Availability)
1:45 p.m. - Sally Jewell (Media Availability)
2:30 p.m. - Preparing for the 2017 total solar eclipse (Workshop)
4:00 p.m. - Sharing big, hard ideas with many kinds of people (Workshop)
5:00 p.m. - Early returns from four far-flung field experiments (Workshop)
All Fall Meeting press events will be streamed live on the AGU press events webpage and archived on AGU's YouTube channel.
3. Noteworthy sessions happening today
The post-election session and Sally Jewell's Special Lecture will be streamed live in the Press Conference Room, Moscone West, Room 3000 and on AGU On-Demand. Registered journalists who are interested in attending these events should meet an AGU staff member at the entrance to the lecture hall 30 minutes prior to the start of the talk.
4. Potentially newsworthy presentations happening today
5. Online media resources
For journalists: During the Fall Meeting, journalists can find many resources online in the Virtual Press Room in the Media Center on the Fall Meeting website. These resources include press releases, press conference materials and other information. Videos of press conferences will be added to the Virtual Press Room during the meeting for easy online access.
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The AGU press office is offering two new online tools to connect reporters with scientific experts at the 2016 Fall Meeting. The Find an Expert tool allows public information officers to list scientific experts who are available to be interviewed by reporters at the meeting. The Request an Expert tool allows reporters to send requests for experts directly to PIOs.
More information about these tools can be found in the Fall Meeting Media Center.
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