Chris Stenger on Unsplash
Chris Stenger on Unsplash

Pre-Incan gold – guano created agricultural oases in the Atacama desert

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Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Parts of Chile’s Atacama desert became an unlikely food bowl thanks to bird poo. Analysis of plant and food remains found that around 1,100 years ago their nitrogen isotope content rose substantially, particularly for maize. Similar patterns of change were seen in humans there at the same time, probably reflecting a maize-based diet. The researchers propose that the extra nitrogen came from using seabird guano – called “white gold” - as a fertilizer. The guano was transported over 90 km from the coast, possibly using llama caravans, and this practice was thought to have continued for at least 400 years.

Journal/conference: Nature Plants

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41477-020-00835-4

Organisation/s: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile

Funder: Funded by the National Geographic Society for Early Career grant nos. EC-53250R-18, FONDECYT 3180317, 1181829 and 1191452 and the Becas Chile-PhD Scholarship. C.H. is supported by Nucleo Milenio INVASAL funded by Chile’s government programme, Iniciativa Científica Milenio from the Ministerio de Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología, Conocimiento e Innovación. C.L. acknowledges support from grant no. ANID PIA CCTE AFB170008 and Nucleo Milenio UPWELL.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Agriculture: ‘White gold’ guano drove robust agriculture in Atacama Desert from AD 1000

Seabird guano fertilizer — also known as ‘white gold’ — could have been responsible for the highly productive agricultural systems of pre-Incan civilization in the otherwise arid climate of the Atacama Desert. These findings, reported in a paper published in Nature Plants, shed light on the development of the large population centres and society between AD 1000 and AD 1450 in what is now northern Chile.

Nestled in the driest desert in the word, robust agricultural systems supported pre-Incan civilizations for centuries. The pre-Hispanic archaeological record of northern Chile has preserved large quantities of diverse crops that suggests a level of agricultural success that has defied explanation.

Francisca Santana-Sagredo and colleagues analysed complete specimens of maize, chilli pepper, gourd, beans, quinoa and wild local fruits from the Atacama Desert dated between 1000 BC and AD 1800. They found a substantial increase in nitrogen isotope values from around AD 1000.  Maize was the most affected, with nitrogen isotope values as high as +30 parts per thousand. The authors also analysed more than 800 published human isotope values from the same location and date range and found that human bone collagen followed a similar trend. It also showed a significant increase in carbon isotope values, which suggests an increase in the consumption of maize at the same time.

The authors attribute this shift to extremely high nitrogen isotope values — the highest in the world for archaeological plants — to the use of seabird guano as crop fertilizer. They argue that the use of this fertilizer had strong implications for the intensification of agriculture and population growth, as well as for social complexity, which is typically unusual within such extreme environmental conditions.

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