Rendering Economies: Native American Labor and Secondary Animal Products in the Eighteenth-Century Pimería Alta

Part of the Pimería Alta Missions Fauna project

Author(s): Barnet Pavao-Zuckerman

Year: 2011

Summary

While the ostensible motivation for Spanish missionization in the Americas was religious conversion, missions were also critical to the expansion of European economic institutions in the sixteenth through nineteenth centuries. Native American labor in mission contexts was recruited in support of broader programs of colonialism, mercantilism, and resource extraction. Archaeological research throughout North America demonstrates the importance and extent of the integration of Native labor into regional colonial economies. Animals and animal products were often important commodities within colonial-period regional exchange networks and thus, zooarchaeological data can be crucial to the reconstruction of local economic practices that linked Native labor to larger-scale economic processes. Zooarchaeological remains from two Spanish missions–one in southern Arizona and one in northern Sonora–demonstrate that Native labor supported broader colonial economic processes through the production of animal products such as tallow and hide. Tallow rendered at Mission San Agustín de Tucson and Mission Nuestra Señora del Pilar y Santiago de Cocóspera was vital for mining activities in the region, which served as an important wealth base for the continued development of Spanish colonialism in the Americas. This research also demonstrates continuity in rendering practices over millennia of human history, and across diverse geographical regions, permitting formalization of a set of expectations for identifying tallow-rendered assemblages, regardless of context.

Cite this Record

Rendering Economies: Native American Labor and Secondary Animal Products in the Eighteenth-Century Pimería Alta. Barnet Pavao-Zuckerman. American Antiquity. 76 (1): 3-23. 2011 ( tDAR id: 376364) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8C24VP2

This Resource is Part of the Following Collections

URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/41331872


Spatial Coverage

min long: -112.948; min lat: 28.192 ; max long: -109.011; max lat: 33.119 ;

Individual & Institutional Roles

Contact(s): Barnet Pavao-Zuckerman

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