On the road into Grünland, a Mennonite colony in the Bolivian department of Beni, the only sound is a distant chainsaw.
On either side, strips of deforested land extend into the distance. Underfoot, the soil is scattered with shards of ceramic and bone: remnants of the pre-Colombian peoples that this part of the Bolivian Amazon, known as the Llanos de Mojos, once supported.
Archaeologists are only just beginning to understand the scale and complexity of these societies, but all the while, the agricultural frontier keeps advancing, destroying sites before they can be studied. The environmental damage of deforestation is well-known, but the Llanos de Mojos reveals another side of its impact: the loss of human history.
Grünland was founded in 2005 by Mennonites, members of the secretive Anabaptist Christian group that began arriving in South America in the early 20th century, in search of isolation and lands to cultivate.
In one field, a Mennonite man called Guillermo was resting in the shade of his tractor. He cheerfully acknowledged finding ceramics and bones on the land. Umberto Lombardo, an Italian earth scientist, probed gently with questions about the topography of the land when it was first deforested.
Esta historia es de la edición December 02, 2022 de The Guardian Weekly.
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