Ceramics of the Indigenous Peoples of South America: Studies of Production and Exchange using INAA
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Indigenous ceramics from the continent of South America range from the common to the artistic with many types characterized by symbolic, religious imagery. In some areas, pottery was mass produced for the general population as well as the elite. Reliance on compositional data from instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) to study production and exchange practices of indigenous ceramics from the continent of South America has grown over the past two decades. In some instances, the data from other analytical methods have been integrated with data from INAA to extend the investigations toward more complex questions. In this symposium, several case studies will be presented facilitating comparisons and contrasts between regions.
Other Keywords
Ceramic Analysis •
INAA •
Ceramics •
Pottery •
Neutron Activation Analysis •
Compositional Analysis •
Pottery Production •
Social Interaction •
Smoking Pipes •
Geochemical Analysis
Geographic Keywords
South America
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-12 of 12)
- Documents (12)
- Characterization of ceramics of the Lima Culture – The Villa El Salvador site (2016)
- Comparative characterization and sourcing of pottery styles from the Lurin valley, central coast of Peru (2016)
- A compositional signature of multi-craft production?: Food vessels from Great Plaza of Huacas de Sican (2016)
- Cultural implications of neutron activation analysis of ceramics from Palmitopamba, Ecuador (2016)
- The INAA Analysis of Pottery from Machu Picchu: An Initial Assessment (2016)
- La cerámica de los túmulos funerarios de la costa árida del Desierto de Atacama, Chile. Química, circulación e intercambio entre interior y costa (2016)
- Pottery production and consumption in the Andean-Amazonian frontier in southwestern Colombia (2500-500 BP) (2016)
- Pottery production, circulation and exchange during the Formative period in Tarapacá, northern Chile (2016)
- Provisioning Inka rule in NW Argentina (2016)
- Recruited or Annexed Lineages: A Chemical Analysis of Purén and Lumaco Pottery and Clays (2016)
- Social interaction and communities of practice in Formative period NW Argentina: A multi-analytical study of ceramics (2016)
- Testing the social aggregation hypothesis for Llolleo communities in Central Chile with NAA of ceramic smoking pipes and drinking jars (2016)