Niède Guidon
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Niède Guidon | |
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Born | 12 March 1933 |
Nationality | Brazilian |
Alma mater | University of São Paulo University of Paris (Sorbonne) |
Known for | Protecting Brazil's threatened archaeological sites |
Awards | Prince Claus Award |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Archaeology |
Institutions | Serra da Capivara National Park in Piauí, Brazil |
Niède Guidon (Portuguese pronunciation: [niˈɛdʒi ɡiˈdõ]) is a Brazilian archaeologist who was born on the 12 March 1933 in Jaú, in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. She has won international recognition and support for her struggle to protect Brazil's rich archaeological heritage.
Since the late 20th century, she has excavated hundreds of prehistoric sites in Piauí, Brazil. Her dates from sites indicate that human settlement preceded the earliest known in North America by tens of thousands of years, which has generated controversy. In addition, she has theorized that some of the early ancient peoples may have arrived from Africa by boat, rather than over the land bridge from northeast Asia.
Personal history
Guidon holds a degree in Natural History from the University of São Paulo and a doctorate in Archaeology from the Sorbonne in Paris, France. " In 2005, Niède was awarded the Prince Claus Award, an award or grant given to individuals or organizations in hopes of providing more opportunities for the future.[1] She is now retired on a pension from the French government at the age of 73, but continues to lead excavations and push for the development of Brazil as a whole.
Contributions
Guidon has set up a cultural center, the Musée de l'Homme Américain, and numerous community support centers in local communities. These offer civil services, education, medical aid, and training in ecology, prehistory, and the restoration of archaeological artifacts. Guidon has also made attempts at improving the educational opportunities in Brazil by leading petitions to build schools. She successfully established five new schools in local communities with a teaching faculty from the University of São Paulo, but they have slowly declined in activity due to the lack of governmental structure. A ceramics business was begun by her efforts (Cerâmica de Capivara). When it began turning a profit she gave the reins over to local entrepreneurs to assist in their business endeavors.
In 1978 she petitioned the Brazilian government to create the Parque Nacional Serra de Capivara which solidified the next 25 years of her archaeological dedication. Her findings were first brought to the spotlight in 1986 with a publication in the British magazine Nature, in which she claimed to have discovered 32,000-year-old hearths and human artifacts. Although such early dates have not generally been accepted, Guidon and her colleagues made the contribution of showing that the area was occupied by Paleoindian and Archaic rock art cultures subsisting on broad-spectrum hunting and gathering. In 1988 she began a partnership with IBAMA (Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources) that led to the continuation of her excavations.
Parque Nacional Serra de Capivara
Niède Guidon is the head archaeologist at the Serra da Capivara National Park in Piauí, Brazil, the most underdeveloped state. In this park, she and her colleagues have discovered more than 800 pre-historic sites revealing occupation of the Americas by human beings. The locality of Pedra Furada is the archaeological rock art site where Guidon and her colleagues excavated a Paleoindian culture that they claimed was as old as c. 30,000 years B.P.[2]
The park encompasses an area protected by UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization).[3] Niède Guidon is responsible for that area's preservation, development and management. Based on her findings and excavations, she and her colleagues believe the possibility of previously believed early-American dates of human habitation to be exceeded by more than 30,000 years.[4]
Pedra Furada site
Niède Guidon's most famous prehistoric site is the Toca do Boqueira de Pedra Furada ("Pedra Furada Site"), which is located in vicinity of São Raimundo Nonato in the Serra de Capivara region in Brazil. She came across a structure resembling a bonfire equipped with arranged logs and stones that she believes date back to 48,700 years ago. She has suggested that humans reached Brazil about 100,000 years ago, probably from Africa by boat.[5] Michael R. Waters, a geoarchaeologist at Texas A&M University noted the absence of genetic evidence in modern populations to support Guidon's claim.[6]
Pedra Furada is a rock shelter 55 feet (17 m) deep; its walls are painted with more than 1,150 pre-historic images. Here she has found thousands of artifacts that possibly suggest human handiwork. The plant and animal remains recovered from the c. 10,000-year-old levels of this site and from comparable levels of another rockshelter in the Serra, the Perna site, show that the area was more humid and more forested than today.
She has discovered over 800 historical sites, of which more than 600 are accompanied by paintings. She has recorded over 35,000 archaeological images and published multiple papers and books.
See also
References
- ^ "Prince Claus Fund - Network". www.princeclausfund.org. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ Guidon, Niède y G. Delibrias (1986). "Carbon-14 dates point to man in the Americas 32 000 years ago". Nature (321): 769–771. doi:10.1038/321769a0.
- ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "Serra da Capivara National Park". whc.unesco.org. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ ALEX BELLOS, "Brazilian Findings Spark Archeological Debate", The Guardian, 14 February 2000, hosted at Cabrillo University website, accessed 19 January 2015
- ^ Romero, Simon (March 27, 2014). "Discoveries Challenge Beliefs on Humans' Arrival in the Americas". New York Times. Retrieved 9 October 2015.
- ^ Romero, Simon (2014-03-27). "Discoveries Challenge Beliefs on Humans' Arrival in the Americas". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-01-29.