Bird and Fish Remains from Isla Cilvituk: Evidence of Market Niche Construction in a Postclassic Maya Lacustrine Environment
Part of the INVESTIGACIONES ARQUEOLÓGICAS EN LAS UNIDADES HABITACIONALES DE ISLA CILVITUK, CAMPECHE, MEXICO project
Author(s): Brandon McIntosh
Year: 2014
Summary
Through evolutionary ecology and niche construction theory, animal exploitation among the inhabitants of Postclassic Isla Cilvituk (A.D. 900-1520) is explored in light of both subsistence and market strategy. An ecological approach is taken to understand how local ecosystems influenced animal exploitation in relation to hunting strategies and market trade at Isla Cilvituk and other sites across the Maya Lowlands. An ecological approach also contributes relevant data to aid in modern conservation efforts on the Yucatán peninsula.
Cite this Record
Bird and Fish Remains from Isla Cilvituk: Evidence of Market Niche Construction in a Postclassic Maya Lacustrine Environment. Brandon McIntosh. Masters Thesis. New Mexico State University (NMSU), Anthropology. 2014 ( tDAR id: 500216) ; doi:10.48512/XCV8500216
Keywords
Culture
LOWLAND MAYA
Material
Building Materials
•
Ceramic
•
Chipped Stone
•
Dating Sample
•
Fauna
•
Ground Stone
•
Macrobotanical
•
Metal
•
Pollen
•
Shell
Site Name
Isla Cilvituk, Campeche, Mexico
Site Type
Agricultural Field or Field Feature
•
Ancient Church / Religious Structure
•
Ancient Governmental Structure
•
Ancient Structure
•
chultun
•
House
•
House Mound
•
Platform Mound
•
Plaza
•
Pyramid
•
Stairway
•
stelae
•
Temple
•
Terrace
•
Town / City
•
Water Control Feature
Investigation Types
Archaeological Overview
•
Data Recovery / Excavation
•
Historic Background Research
•
Methodology, Theory, or Synthesis
•
Reconnaissance / Survey
•
Site Evaluation / Testing
General
Household Archaeology
•
Lacustrine settlement
•
Postclassic Lowland Maya
•
Resilience
•
Settlement Ecology
•
Terminal Classic-Postclassic transition
Geographic Keywords
Northern Maya Lowlands
Temporal Keywords
Terminal Classic through Late Postclassic period (AD 600-1500)
Temporal Coverage
Radiocarbon Date: 1324 to 387 (14C Age BP, 9 radiocarbon dates from animal bone)
Calendar Date: 600 to 1500 (Architecture and Ceramics)
Spatial Coverage
min long: -90.312; min lat: 18.608 ; max long: -90.26; max lat: 18.655 ;
Individual & Institutional Roles
Principal Investigator(s): Rani T Alexander
Record Identifiers
Consejo de Arqueologia, Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia (INAH)(s): Oficio #: C.A. 401-36/492, C.A. 401-36/188, C.A.401-36/427
New Mexico State University, Institutional Review Board, Human Subjects Research(s): Permit 5711 (expedited) 2003
Notes
General Note: This archaeological project was not born digital.
File Information
Name | Size | Creation Date | Date Uploaded | Access | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
McIntosh_Thesis_Final_2014_PDF_A.pdf | 1.98mb | Jun 18, 2024 3:37:08 PM | Public | ||
Brandon McIntosh, Bird and Fish Remains from Isla Cilvituk, 2014 MA Thesis, NMSU |