Amazonian archaeology has been advancing at an unprecedented pace thanks to the rise of new technologies such as aerial photography, satellite imagery, LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging), and now AI, a powerful tool to unveil bio and geo-cultural patterns in the landscape. The ancient tropical cities that are emerging to the surface, and whose temporality will acquire greater resolution as ground truth research advances, are regional in scale and do not cleanly fit within dominant paradigms of the city: low-density urbanisms, diffuse urbanisms, distributed or rhizomatic and heterarchical regional networks, interconnected and agroecological urban constellations, agrarian garden cities, and other combinations emerge to name what the Quechua/Quichua call a llakta, a territorial city, a Living Territory, where nature and culture are indivisible, as are the physical and energetic or spiritual realms. We can describe with words the morphologies of these regional urbanisms (urbs), speculate about the citizens/citizenships of the past (civitas), or attempt to diagram their power structures (polis), but nothing is more revealing of the variegated and unique character of these complex urbanisms than their image. In this research seminar we learn about, and drawing, three “low density agrarian urbanisms” that have been described in detail for the Amazonian biome. The visual outcomes of this seminar will be showcased in the exhibition “Dien Dien: to feel the other and weave a territory,” the third iteration of “Surfacing - The Civilized Agroecological Forests of Amazonia,” which will be housed in a83 gallery, in New York.