Cargando…

Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids

Llama (Lama glama) and alpaca (Vicugna pacos) are the only large domesticated animals indigenous to the Americas. Pastoralism occupies a fundamental economic, social and religious role in Andean life. Today, camelid livestock are confined to the ecozone of the puna (above 3,500 masl), while their pr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dufour, Elise, Goepfert, Nicolas, Gutiérrez Léon, Belkys, Chauchat, Claude, Franco Jordán, Régulo, Sánchez, Segundo Vásquez
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3909195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24498136
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087559
_version_ 1782301800946204672
author Dufour, Elise
Goepfert, Nicolas
Gutiérrez Léon, Belkys
Chauchat, Claude
Franco Jordán, Régulo
Sánchez, Segundo Vásquez
author_facet Dufour, Elise
Goepfert, Nicolas
Gutiérrez Léon, Belkys
Chauchat, Claude
Franco Jordán, Régulo
Sánchez, Segundo Vásquez
author_sort Dufour, Elise
collection PubMed
description Llama (Lama glama) and alpaca (Vicugna pacos) are the only large domesticated animals indigenous to the Americas. Pastoralism occupies a fundamental economic, social and religious role in Andean life. Today, camelid livestock are confined to the ecozone of the puna (above 3,500 masl), while their presence on the Pacific coast during pre-Hispanic times is attested by archaeological skeletal remains. This study aims to document herding practices on the northern Peruvian coast during the Early Intermediate Period (200 BC-600 AD) by gaining insights into diet, location of breeding and mobility of archaeological camelids from the funerary and ritual contexts of two Mochica sites, Uhle Platform in Huacas de Moche and El Brujo. The three first early years and the long-term life histories of the animals were documented by the combined bulk analysis of bone collagen (δ(13)C(col) and δ(15)N(col)) and bone structural carbonate (δ(13)C(bone) and δ(18)O(bone)) and the serial analysis of structural carbonate of molar tooth enamel (δ(13)C(enamel) and δ(18)O(enamel)). Mochica camelids were bred in the low and/or middle valleys, unlike their modern counterparts, who are restricted to highland puna C(3) pastures. Archaeological camelids had diverse and complex life histories, usually with substantial maize foddering. An ontogenetic switch in diet and possible residential mobility during the course of life were identified for some specimens. Although the inference of geographic origin from δ(18)O(bone) and δ(18)O(enamel) values was limited because of the lack of understanding of the influence of environmental and biological factors, tooth enamel analysis has great potential for exploring camelid herding practices and Andean pastoralism. Our study suggested that Mochica herders adapted their practices to the difficult lowland environment and that herding practices were varied and not restricted to breeding at higher altitudes. The role of maize in different aspects of the economic life of the Mochicas is also underlined.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3909195
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-39091952014-02-04 Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids Dufour, Elise Goepfert, Nicolas Gutiérrez Léon, Belkys Chauchat, Claude Franco Jordán, Régulo Sánchez, Segundo Vásquez PLoS One Research Article Llama (Lama glama) and alpaca (Vicugna pacos) are the only large domesticated animals indigenous to the Americas. Pastoralism occupies a fundamental economic, social and religious role in Andean life. Today, camelid livestock are confined to the ecozone of the puna (above 3,500 masl), while their presence on the Pacific coast during pre-Hispanic times is attested by archaeological skeletal remains. This study aims to document herding practices on the northern Peruvian coast during the Early Intermediate Period (200 BC-600 AD) by gaining insights into diet, location of breeding and mobility of archaeological camelids from the funerary and ritual contexts of two Mochica sites, Uhle Platform in Huacas de Moche and El Brujo. The three first early years and the long-term life histories of the animals were documented by the combined bulk analysis of bone collagen (δ(13)C(col) and δ(15)N(col)) and bone structural carbonate (δ(13)C(bone) and δ(18)O(bone)) and the serial analysis of structural carbonate of molar tooth enamel (δ(13)C(enamel) and δ(18)O(enamel)). Mochica camelids were bred in the low and/or middle valleys, unlike their modern counterparts, who are restricted to highland puna C(3) pastures. Archaeological camelids had diverse and complex life histories, usually with substantial maize foddering. An ontogenetic switch in diet and possible residential mobility during the course of life were identified for some specimens. Although the inference of geographic origin from δ(18)O(bone) and δ(18)O(enamel) values was limited because of the lack of understanding of the influence of environmental and biological factors, tooth enamel analysis has great potential for exploring camelid herding practices and Andean pastoralism. Our study suggested that Mochica herders adapted their practices to the difficult lowland environment and that herding practices were varied and not restricted to breeding at higher altitudes. The role of maize in different aspects of the economic life of the Mochicas is also underlined. Public Library of Science 2014-01-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3909195/ /pubmed/24498136 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087559 Text en © 2014 Dufour et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dufour, Elise
Goepfert, Nicolas
Gutiérrez Léon, Belkys
Chauchat, Claude
Franco Jordán, Régulo
Sánchez, Segundo Vásquez
Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids
title Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids
title_full Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids
title_fullStr Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids
title_full_unstemmed Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids
title_short Pastoralism in Northern Peru during Pre-Hispanic Times: Insights from the Mochica Period (100–800 AD) Based on Stable Isotopic Analysis of Domestic Camelids
title_sort pastoralism in northern peru during pre-hispanic times: insights from the mochica period (100–800 ad) based on stable isotopic analysis of domestic camelids
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3909195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24498136
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087559
work_keys_str_mv AT dufourelise pastoralisminnorthernperuduringprehispanictimesinsightsfromthemochicaperiod100800adbasedonstableisotopicanalysisofdomesticcamelids
AT goepfertnicolas pastoralisminnorthernperuduringprehispanictimesinsightsfromthemochicaperiod100800adbasedonstableisotopicanalysisofdomesticcamelids
AT gutierrezleonbelkys pastoralisminnorthernperuduringprehispanictimesinsightsfromthemochicaperiod100800adbasedonstableisotopicanalysisofdomesticcamelids
AT chauchatclaude pastoralisminnorthernperuduringprehispanictimesinsightsfromthemochicaperiod100800adbasedonstableisotopicanalysisofdomesticcamelids
AT francojordanregulo pastoralisminnorthernperuduringprehispanictimesinsightsfromthemochicaperiod100800adbasedonstableisotopicanalysisofdomesticcamelids
AT sanchezsegundovasquez pastoralisminnorthernperuduringprehispanictimesinsightsfromthemochicaperiod100800adbasedonstableisotopicanalysisofdomesticcamelids