Artículo de revista
Of pipes and substances: fumatorial customs during the formative period in the desert coast of Atacama (north of Chile)
Fecha
2015Registro en:
Latin American Antiquity. Volumen: 26 Número: 2 Páginas: 143-161 Jun 2015
DOI: 10.7183/1045-6635.26.2.143
Autor
Carrasco, Carolina
Echeverría, Javier
Ballester, Benjamín
Niemeyer Marich, August
Institución
Resumen
Smoking pipes found in funerary contexts on the Atacama Desert coast suggest that the custom
of smoking was widespread among hunter-gatherers and fishermen during the Formative (1500
B.C.- cal A.D. 1000). The substances smoked and their provenience have remained unknown
until now. This knowledge is essential for understanding smoking as part of the functioning and
the reproduction of social groups among these early coastal populations. Here we report on the
archaeobotanical and chemical analysis of internal residue front four inverted-T lithic pipes
recovered from a cemetery near the coastal city of Anto-fagasta, in northern Chile. We also
carried out chemical analyses of human hair belonging to one of the individuals with whom the
pipes had been interred. Analysis of residue from inside the pipes revealed the presence of
nicotine and other substances, as well as micro-remains of Nicotiana and other plant species.
Nicotine was also detected in the hair sample from the buried individual. We discuss the
implications of these results for understanding the availability of resources and the mobility
strategies, exchange relationships, and lifestyles of these littoral communities.