Artículo
Fire Events, Violence and Abandonment Scenarios in the Ancient Andes: The Final Stage of the Aguada Culture in the Ambato Valley, Northwest Argentina
Fecha de publicación:
06/2016
Editorial:
Springer
Revista:
Journal Of World Prehistory
ISSN:
0892-7537
e-ISSN:
1573-7802
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Understanding how archaeological sites are abandoned is a vital part of archaeology. This paper explores abandonment as a phenomenon in a worldwide context, particularly in relation to sites with evidence of fire, and with a special focus on the South-Central Andes. I evaluate the patterns from an area of the Argentinian Andes and discuss the disappearance of the Aguada Culture, one of the central cultures in Argentinian prehistory, using evidence from the core area the Ambato Valley. I conclude that environmental factors were not the sole or determining source of stress, but rather part of a social–environmental dimension in which several factors combined to push a society into a vulnerable situation. In terms of the abandonment of the Aguada settlements in the Ambato Valley, the study shows that frequent forest fires might have played a role, but based upon the regularity of such events as seen in the sediment history, it is unlikely that these were the only factor in the process of abandonment of the valley.
Palabras clave:
Abandonment
,
Aguada Culture
,
Ambato Valley
,
Fire
,
Microcharcoal
,
Northwest Argentina
Archivos asociados
Licencia
Identificadores
Colecciones
Articulos(IDACOR)
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE ANTROPOLOGIA DE CORDOBA
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE ANTROPOLOGIA DE CORDOBA
Citación
Lindskoug, Henrik Bernhard; Fire Events, Violence and Abandonment Scenarios in the Ancient Andes: The Final Stage of the Aguada Culture in the Ambato Valley, Northwest Argentina; Springer; Journal Of World Prehistory; 29; 2; 6-2016; 155-214
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