INVESTIGADORES
ABBONA Cinthia Carolina
artículos
Título:
Were domestic camelids present on the prehispanic South American agricultural frontier? An ancient DNA study
Autor/es:
ABBONA, CINTHIA CAROLINA; GUSTAVO, NEME; JEFF, JOHNSON; GIL, ADOLFO; KIM TRACY; WOLVERTON, STEVE
Revista:
PLOS ONE
Editorial:
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Referencias:
Lugar: San Francisco; Año: 2020
ISSN:
1932-6203
Resumen:
The southern boundary of prehispanic farming in South America occurs in central Mendoza Province, Argentina at approximately 34 degrees south latitude. Archaeological evidence of farming includes the recovery of macrobotanical remains of cultigens and isotopic chemistry of human bone. Since the 1990s archaeologists have also hypothesized that the llama (Lama glama), a domesticated South American camelid, was also hearded near the southern boundary of prehispanic farming. The remains of a wild congeneric camelid, the guanaco (Lama guanicoe), however, are common in archaeological sites throughout Mendoza Province. It is difficult to distinguish bones of the domestic llama from wild guanaco in terms of osteological morphology, and therefore, claims that llama were in geographic areas where guanaco were also present based on osteometric analysis alone reamain equivocal. A recent study, for example, claimed that twenty-five percent of the camelid remains from the high elevation Andes site of Laguna del Diamante S4 were identified based on osteometric evidence as domestic llama, but guanaco are also a likely candidate since the two species overlap in size. We test the hypothesis that domesticated camelids occurred in prehispanic, central Mendoza through analysis of ancient DNA. We generated whole mitochondrial genome datasets for a total of 41 samples from southern Mendoza late Holocene archaeological sites, located between 450 and 3400 masl. All camelid samples from those sites were identified as guanaco; thus, we have no evidence to support the hypothesis that the domestic llama occurred in prehispanic southern Mendoza.