Moseley's (1975) hypothesis challenges, in one of humanity's few pristine hearths of civilization, the axiom that agriculture is necessary for the rise of complex societies. We revisit that hypothesis by setting new findings from La Yerba II (7571-6674 Cal bp) and III (6485-5893 Cal bp), Río Ica estuary, alongside the wider archaeological record for the end of the Middle Preceramic Period on the Peruvian coast. The La Yerba record evinces increasing population, sedentism, and "Broad Spectrum Revolution" features, including early horticulture of and beans. Yet unlike further north, these changes failed to presage the florescence of monumental civilization during the subsequent Late Preceramic Period. Instead, the south coast saw a profound "archaeological silence." These contrasting trajectories had little to do with any relative differences in resources, but rather to restrictions on the resources that determined a society's capacity to intensify exploitation of those marine resources. We explain this apparent miscarriage of the (MFAC) hypothesis on the south coast of Peru by proposing more explicit links than hitherto, between the detailed technological aspects of marine exploitation using plant fibers to make fishing nets and the emergence of social complexity on the coast of Peru. Rather than because of any significant advantages in , it was the potential for increased of production, inherent in the shift from gathered wild bast fibers to cultivated cotton, that inadvertently precipitated revolutionary social change. Thereby refined, the MFAC hypothesis duly emerges more persuasive than ever.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10816-017-9341-3 | DOI Listing |
Dalton Trans
January 2025
Department of Ceramic Engineering, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, Odisha, 769008, India.
This work integrates a unique porous carbon with a binary heterostructured NiFeO/CuWO composite to enhance electrocatalytic activity towards the oxygen evolution reaction. The NiFeO/CuWO binary heterostructure was prepared through the conventional co-precipitation method. The porous carbon with turbostratic order was obtained by the selective etching of SiO nanodomains from preceramic polymer-derived SiOC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
February 2024
Department of Anthropology, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824, USA.
We report one of the earliest known circular plazas in Andean South America and one of the earliest examples of monumental, megalithic ceremonial architecture in the Americas. The example presented here is constructed of large free-standing and vertically placed megalithic stones and is located in the Cajamarca basin of the northern Peruvian Andes. This construction method has never before been reported in the Andes and is distinct from other monumental circular plazas in the region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Biol Anthropol
March 2022
Zona Arqueológica Caral, Unidad Ejecutora 003, Ministerio de Cultura del Peru, Lima, Peru.
Objectives: The subsistence system of the first urban centers with monumental architecture from the North-Central Coast of Peru, the core area for the social complexity process of Central Andes, has been debated since the late 1960s. To shed light on this aspect, we report paleodietary data from the two most important sites of the Supe Valley: Caral (3000-200 BC), the major settlement of the middle valley, and Áspero (3000-1800 BC), a notable coastal settlement. Our main objective was to test the Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization hypothesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 2021
Grupo de Investigación en Geología Sedimentaria, Especialidad de Ingeniería Geológica, Departamento de Ingeniería, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Lima 15088, Perú.
Adobe bricks, or mud bricks, are construction elements which have defined major architectural traditions in the Andes over thousands of years. From Moche pyramids and the ancient city of Chan Chan in pre-Hispanic times, to Spanish casonas of the colonial period and rural houses in contemporary South America, adobe has been a central component in Andean architecture. Discovery of the remains of an early monumental building constructed primarily of adobes at Los Morteros (lower Chao Valley, north coast of Peru) places the invention of adobe architecture before 5,100 calendar years B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Anat
February 2022
Dent. Surg. Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, Peru. Electronic address:
Reconstructing plant-based healing treatments of past societies from a dental anthropological perspective is still challenging due to a wide range of plant species, many with both medicinal and nutritional properties, and limitations on plant-taxa identification. Starch grains and phytoliths retrieved in samples from dental calculus and sediment contained in the cavity of dental caries were examined to investigate the supply of a plant-based treatment in an individual buried in the Late Preceramic site of Huaca El Paraíso (2100-1500 BCE), whose osteological analysis reported the absence of any pathological condition at a bone tissue level. A variety of starch grains such as pumpkins, manioc, maize, and beans had an important role in the diet of the individual.
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