Archaic Period Flashcards

Study for midterm

1
Q

ARCHAIC

PERIOD

A

9000-4500 bp

Transition from small h/g bands to settled village agriculture

Big game extinction by the begining of this period

Origins of Agriculture is the key question

Ends with pottery (Early Formative)

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2
Q

Origins of Agriculture

Diffusion

A

Agriculture is an invention that spreads from a single source

Thor Heirdal: getting an Egyptian boat (near) to the New World shows agriculture and pyramid buiding came from the Old World

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3
Q

Agriculture:

“Farming” v. “Domestication”

A

Coe, others argue that it is not agriculture until you have domestication (maladaptive change in genetic characteristics)

Brown says agriculture is a set of human activities revolving around plant foods

protecting plants, clearing land, planting seeds, irrigation, prior to domestication

Farming” (including wild plants) creates a context in which domestication is possible

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4
Q

MacNeish in the Tehuacan Valley

A

rejected cultural diffusion

organized effort to find origins of agriculture in the Basin of Mexico

Worked in dry rock shelters in the Tehuacan valley (well preserved)

Assumed origin of agriculture would not be below levels without grinding tools (no grinding tools = not processing plants)

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5
Q

Tehuacan Chronology

A

9500-7200 El Riego

7200-5400 Coxcatlan

5400-4400 Abejas

4400 Purron

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6
Q

Tehuacan Valley Phases

El Reigo

A

9500-7200 bp

MacNeish stopped here

Hunting, but only small game

Wild foods prevalent, including maize (maguey hearts still the primary plant food)

domesticated chiles, squash, amaranth appear (but not maize)

Longer occupation periods as a result of processing ripe plant foods

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7
Q

Tehuacan Valley Phases

Coxcatlan

A

7200-5400 bp

Camps occupied for much of the wet season (scheduling)

if you are going to rely on MBS, must be in the area when they are ripe

Coprolites show no maguey fibers (as contrasted with dry season sites and all sites in earlier eras)

Occupations lengthen over time

(Brown: agriculture is a set of activities relating to scheduling)

Evidence of arrival at camps earlier in the wet season to protect plants from deer (scheduling)

domesticated maize appears in this level

formalized grinding tools appear

MacNeish estimates that 10% of food from domesticates (excludes wild plant foods)

“Succession weeds” (MBS) are not being succeeded because humans are expanding and protecting growth

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8
Q

Tehaucan Valley Phases:

Abejas

A

5400-4400 bp

Pit houses appear on valley floor

Caches and pits associated with longer stays (possibly year round)

30% of diet from food provided by domesticates (MacNeish’s definition of agriculture)

(90% if wild plant foods are included)

Not taking time to hunt becuase it takes away from protecting the field

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9
Q

Tehuacan Valley Phases

Purron

A

4400 bp (begins)

Characterized by first appearance of pottery and permantly settled villages in the valley

(MacNeish associated pottery wth settled villages - heavy and not suitable for mobile storage - but the same pit houses were in use as from the Abejas period)

Zia maize (4.5 inches v. 2 inches) domesticated at this time (possibly coming back to Tehuacan Valley from the Gulf Coast lowlands

Exchange between Tehuacan Valley and Gulf Coast lowlands

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10
Q

Maize Genetic Mutations

A

Wild maize: seeds fall off easily, each is protected by a husk and has a hard thick covering to protect to the next growing season

Mutations (zia maize):

1) Husk covers the entire ear
2) Kernel is fixed to the cob
3) kernel is soft

Leaves the plant unable to reproduce w/out human intervention

Zia maize double the size of the corn cob

MacNeish believed that environment of GC lowlands is what led to the mutations

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11
Q

“Succession” Plants

A

Maize, Beans and Squash (MBS) are “successsion plants”

Don’t contine to occupy the same space for long periods of time

Seeds are blown in the wind and take root in areas where other plants have not taken hold

such as where fire has cleared a plot of land

Undisturbed, these succession plants are eventually succeeded, and driven out, by brush and trees which take the sunlight

Humans are stopping the succession process in flood plains to favor MBS

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12
Q

Tehuacan Valley Gulf Coast Lowlands Exchange

A

MacNeish argues that permanently settled villages were first invented in the Gulf Coast lowlands (see Poverty Point)

McN argues that migrants from Tehuacan Valey brought MBS to Gulf Coast lowlands and introduced farming

In turn, Gulf Lowlands people gave the invention of settled villages to the Tehuacanos

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13
Q

Gulf Coast Lowlands

A

First occupation in 5500 bp

Associated with change in climate allowing tropical forests to dominate and created mangrove swamps where rivers flowed into the ocean

Permanent settlements

Living on fresh water from rivers, rich deposits of shellfish and fruit from trees

(tropical forests are otherwise inhospitable for humans becuase of lack of animal protein)

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14
Q

Gulf Coast Lowlands

Agriculture

A

Natural levees along the river banks are attractive to MBS farmers - flooding replaces nutrients and suppresses invasive grasses, produce 2-3 crops a year

(river levees are of little value to shellfish/fruit eaters)

Theory is that immigrants from Tehuacan Valley came into Gulf Lowlands and killed trees to create fields in the river levees

This was not displacing existing inhabitants, adding to their diet

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15
Q

Rise of Settled Villages in Gulf Coast Lowlands

A

Fresh water flowing into the Gulf creates brackish backwaters with an abundance of shellfish

Also abundant fruit from trees in the area

6000 bp with change in climate creating these conditions, people come down from the Highlands bringing farming with them.

First inhabitants found they did not have to expend huge resources in farming becuse of shellfish resources

no longer dependent on a single crop

resources don’t move so settled villages make sense (also allows protection as population increases)

Retained contact with highlands becuase both farmers and shellfish collectors need stone

stone for grinding cereal, sharp edges to cut trees or create weapons

Farmers are likely the ones with portable resources that can trade for stone from the Highlands

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16
Q

Rise of Settled Villages in the Highlands

A

By 6000 bp farmers in the Highlands are increasing their dependence on farmed foods – which you have to stay around to support

Settled villages happend becuase people are dependent on non-moving resources (agricultural fields)

in the GC Lowlands, it is the shellfish beds and levee fields

17
Q

Trade Between Highlands

and Gulf Coast Lowlands

A

First trade is driven by the need for stone in the GC lowlands for agriculture

“Basic item” trade: food, basalt, obsidian

Basalt or obsidian to clear trees, grind crops

This creates a need for good ties between GC lowlands and higlands

Ceramics were also flowing from Tehuacan Valley (and Oaxacan Valley)

18
Q

Basin of Mexico

and Domestication

A

MBS could not have been domesticated here

Wild MBS did not grow in the Basin

Domesticated amaranth

19
Q

Basin of Mexico

Trade

A

4500 bp - trade in obsidian leads to intense contact between BofM and Tehuacan Valley, Oaxacan Valley, GC Lowland (agricultural areas)

3500 bp - all of the obsidian in TV, OV and GCL coming from BofM

3000 bp - Obsidian begins to be worked in the BoM

BofM is not suited to MBS agriculture becuase of elevation, but once maize is adapted to grow at elevation Teotihuacan is ideal (basalt, obsidian, fresh water springs, swamps)