How humans adapt to life in an area prone to natural disasters
is an intriguing study for the social sciences. In this volume,
experts from several disciplines explore the adaptation process of
prehistoric societies in the volcanic Arenal region of Costa Rica
from about 2000 BC to the Spanish Conquest at about AD 1500.
The data in this volume come from a survey of the region
conducted with the latest remote sensing technology. Sheets and his
coauthors have compiled a detailed record of human settlements in
the area, including dozens of archaeological sites and a network of
prehistoric footpaths that reveals patterns of travel and
communication across the region. The Arenal peoples prospered in
their precarious environment apparently by taking advantage of food
and lithic resources, keeping population levels low, and avoiding
environmental degradation. These findings will interest a wide
interdisciplinary audience in anthropology and archaeology, earth
sciences, technology, geography, and human ecology.
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