Framing the Local within the Regional: Current Research in the Cusco Region, Peru
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Cusco, Peru is best known as the navel of the Inca universe, but it was also home to postglacial high altitude hunter-gatherers, a network of Formative villages, Wari imperial colonies, rivals to early Inca elites, and a major locus of Spanish colonial rule. Coming out of a prolific phase of regional survey programs, the Cusco region has seen an explosion of problem-based excavations and analytical laboratory-based research that cuts across disciplinary lines. These projects are refining our understandings of biological, economic, and sociopolitical development in the region from the Archaic to Colonial periods. This symposium brings together scholars from diverse sociocultural and biological perspectives to explore patterns of change over the short term and longue durée. Papers approach themes such as migration, ties connecting Cusco to the outside world, the development of multiple and changing political agendas, and how local populations navigated all of the above.
Other Keywords
Inca •
figurines •
Subsistence •
Ritual •
Zooarchaeology •
domestic •
Settlement patterns •
Peru •
inequality •
state formation
Geographic Keywords
South America
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-6 of 6)
- Documents (6)
- The Development of Inequality in Middle Horizon Cusco: Entheogens and Ritual Ceremonies to the Rescue (2016)
- Ecological Variation and Trajectories of Village Settlement in Formative Cusco (2016)
- Excavations at Vilcabamba (2016)
- Multiscalar Analysis of an Early Rival to Inca Power (2016)
- A new look into camelid management in Middle Horizon Cusco (2016)
- New perspectives on the identities and ideologies of localized ancient Andean communities through the examination of figurines. (2016)