帝国末期的黑曜石采购与交换:秘鲁阿雷基帕的瓦里政治经济学

IF 1.1 3区 地球科学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Latin American Antiquity Pub Date : 2024-03-07 DOI:10.1017/laq.2023.68
David A. Reid, Patrick Ryan Williams, Augusto Cardona Rosas, Robin Coleman Goldstein, Laure Dussubieux, Cyrus Banikazemi, Kurt Rademaker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在中地平线时期(公元 600-1000 年),黑曜石在安第斯山脉的运输量和运输距离都超过了以往任何时候,部分原因是瓦里国的扩张。安第斯山脉中南部使用的三大黑曜石来源地中有两个位于现代的秘鲁阿雷基帕省。阿雷基帕是一个受到瓦里人强烈影响和侵入性存在的地区;然而,人们对该地区的黑曜石使用情况知之甚少。研究人员使用便携式 X 射线荧光光谱仪(pXRF)和激光烧蚀-电感耦合等离子体质谱仪(LA-ICP-MS)分析了从阿雷基帕 10 个考古遗址回收的 383 件黑曜石文物。研究结果凸显了与瓦里地区黑曜石采购策略、国家与自下而上的交换网络以及地方参与有关的异时空模式。瓦里人使用了多种地质黑曜石来源,包括来自阿亚库乔中心地带的非本地黑曜石。到中地平线晚期,瓦里人整合了地区资源,只使用阿尔卡-1 号和阿尔卡-4 号基岩黑曜石,这些黑曜石是该地区规模最大、质量最高的资源。我们评估了与国家政治经济、长途商队活动有关的黑曜石采购和交换模式,以及当地仪式/道站中心的作用,这些中心促进了阿雷基帕地区的思想、货物和人员流动。
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Obsidian Procurement and Exchange at the Apogee of Empire: Wari Political Economy in Arequipa, Peru

During the Middle Horizon (AD 600–1000), obsidian was transported in greater quantities and distances than ever before identified in the Andes, in part by the expansionary Wari state. Two of the three major obsidian sources used in the south-central Andes are located in the modern department of Arequipa, Peru. Arequipa was a region of intense Wari influence and intrusive presence; however, little is known about regional obsidian use. Portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) were used to analyze 383 obsidian artifacts recovered from 10 archaeological sites in Arequipa. Results highlight diachronic and spatial patterning related to obsidian procurement strategies, state versus bottom-up exchange networks, and local participation within the Wari realm. A wide variety of geological obsidian sources, including nonlocal obsidians originating from Wari's Ayacucho heartland, were used. By the late Middle Horizon, the Wari had consolidated regional resources with the sole use of Alca-1 and Alca-4 bedrock obsidians, the largest-sized and highest-quality sources in the area. We assess related models of obsidian procurement and exchange related to state political economy, long-distance caravan activity, and the role of local ceremonial/waystation centers that facilitated the flow of ideas, goods, and people across Arequipa.

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