Artículo de revista
Dietary diverstiy in the Atacama desert during the Late intermediate period of northern Chile
Fecha
2019Registro en:
Quaternary Science Reviews, Volumen 214,
02773791
10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.04.022
Autor
Alfonso-Durruty, Marta P.
Gayo, Eugenia M.
Standen, Vivien
Castro, Victoria
Latorre, Claudio
Santoro, Calogero M.
Valenzuela, Daniela
Institución
Resumen
The Pacific Ocean that flanks the hyperarid Atacama Desert of Northern Chile is one of the richest biomass producers around the world. Thus, it is considered a key factor for the subsistence of prehistoric societies (including mixed-economy groups), that inhabited its coastal ecosystems as well as the neighboring inland areas. This study assesses the Arica Culture groups' diet (Late Intermediate Period; 1000–1530 CE), through stable isotope (on bone-collagen; δ13C and δ15N)and dental pathology data. Seventy-seven (n = 77)individuals from two inland (LLU54 and AZ8)and one coastal (CAM8)archaeological sites were studied. Results show an important, but lower than predicted by earlier studies, contribution of marine resources in the diet of all three groups. Dental pathologies and stable isotopes indicate that these groups' diet varied in correlation with their distance to the Pacific Ocean as well as group and individual preferences. The results challenge the idea that Arica Culture groups depended heavily on marine resources for their subsistence. In contrast, this study shows both that the Arica Culture groups’ diet was diverse, and that the terrestrial resources consumed were mostly contributed by C3/CAM plants instead of maize.