The paper examines the role of neotectonic activity in the evolution of the
landscape in southern Amazonia during the Holocene. It uses both new and
published data based on the analysis of remote sensing imagery and extensive
field work in the Llanos de Moxos, Bolivian Amazon. The study of the
region's modern and palaeorivers, ria lakes, palaeosols and topography
provides a strong case in favour of the thesis that the northern part of the
Llanos de Moxos constitutes the southern margin of the Fitzcarrald Arch and
that it has experienced uplift during the Holocene. The paper assesses the
extent and timing of the neotectonic activity in light of the new data and
reconstructs the evolution of the landscape since the late Pleistocene. The
evidence suggests that at least two uplift events took place: a first uplift
in the late Pleistocene, which caused the formation of Lake Oceano, and a
second uplift during the mid-Holocene, which formed Lake Rogaguado. These
two uplifts appear to be linked to the knickpoints observed close to the
towns of Guayaramerín and Puerto Siles respectively. The backwater
effect due to these uplifts transformed the region's major rivers in
seasonal ria lakes, causing the deposition of thick organic clay layers
along the Beni, Mamoré and Madre de Dios river banks. I argue that
neotectonic episodes could have dramatically changed the drainage of the
Llanos de Moxos, determining its flooding regime, soil properties and forest–savannah
ecotone. These results stress the need for geomorphologists, palaeo-ecologists
and archaeologists to take into account neotectonics when reconstructing the
region's past
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