Social Complexity in the Central Andean Region: Current Research on the Initial Period and Early Horizon Part 2
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
The Initial Period is often considered an outgrowth of trends that first appear in the late Preceramic Period. However, archaeological research shows that the Initial Period was in fact a time of significant cultural dynamism, which included the first appearance of pottery, expansion of agricultural systems and a proliferation of monumental public architecture. Meanwhile, Early Horizon studies have traditionally focused on the Chavin phenomenon, obscuring broader trends in cultural trajectories. This session is aimed at exploring the archaeology of the second and first millennia BC, with a particular focus on recent research undertaken throughout coastal and highland Peru over the last 10 years. Topics that will be addressed in this session include chronology, the emergence of pottery technology, domestic and village life, ritual and debates centered on sociopolitical organization.
Other Keywords
Formative •
Early Horizon •
Social Change •
complex societies •
andes •
Architecture •
Art •
Dendrochronology •
Ritual •
Interaction
Geographic Keywords
South America
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Breaking with Tradition: Late Formative Pukara in the Northern Lake Titicaca Basin, Peru (2016)
- Building a dendrochronology for the coast of Peru: high-precision 14C dating results from Chankillo, Casma (2016)
- Early Horizon Foodways and Settlement Nucleation: Preliminary Insights From Samanco, a Maritime Center in the Nepeña Valley, North-Central Peru (2016)
- Early Horizon Warfare and Defensive Architecture in the Lower Nepeña Valley, Coastal Ancash (2016)
- Enchanted Plazas: Monumental Art and Iconography in Early Horizon Coastal Ancash (2016)
- How did the end of the Cupisnique-Chavín Religious Complex affect local leadership? (2016)
- Local Ritual and Social Change in the Andean Formative Period at Hualcayán, Peru (2016)
- The Paracas Phenomenon as an Interaction Sphere during the First Millenium B.C. (2016)
- Political and Economic Dynamics of Maritime Communities of the South Coast of Peru During the First Millenium BC: The Excavations of the Paracas Archaeological Project at Disco Verde and Puerto Nuevo (2016)
- Understanding the ceja de selva in relationship to the Central Andean coast and highlands during the Early Horizon (2016)