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Diet and lifestyle in the first villages of the Middle Preceramic: insights from stable isotope and osteological analyses of human remains from Paloma, Chilca I, La Yerba III and Morro I

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Beresford-Jones, David 
Alday, Camila 
Benfer, Robert A 
Quilter, Jeffrey 

Abstract

We present stable isotope and osteological data from human remains at Paloma, Chilca I, La Yerba III and Morro I that offer new evidence for diet, lifestyle, and habitual mobility in the first villages that proliferated along the arid Pacific coast of South America (ca. 6000 cal BP).
The data reaffirm the dietary primacy of marine protein for this period but also show evidence at Paloma of direct access interactions between coast and highlands, and for habitual mobility in some parts of society. By locating themselves at the confluence of diverse coastal and terrestrial habitats the inhabitants of these early villages were able to broaden their use of resources through rounds of seasonal mobility, while simultaneously increasing residential sedentism. Yet they paid little substantial health penalty for their settled lifestyles reflected in their osteological markers of stature and stress compared with their agriculturalist successors even up to five millennia later. Contrasting data for the north coast of Chile indicate locally contingent differences. Considering these data in a wider chronological context contributes to understanding how increasing sedentism and population laid the foundations here for the emergence of Late Preceramic social complexity.

Description

Keywords

stable isotope analysis, human osteology, Middle Preceramic, Middle Archaic, marine resources, mobility, Pacific coast, South America

Journal Title

Latin American Antiquity

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1045-6635
2325-5080

Volume Title

Publisher

Society for American Archaeology (SAA)
Sponsorship
European Research Council (648609)
The work of DGBJ was supported by the Leverhulme Trust (grant number RPG-117) and the late Don Alberto Benavides de la Quintana (grant number RG69428). The work of EL was supported by the TwoRains project which was funded by the European Research Council (grant agreement number 648609).
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