INVESTIGADORES
ALVAREZ Maria Clara
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Rituality and landascape in the Tandilia hill range (Pampa grasslands of Argentina) during the late Holocene
Autor/es:
PABLO MESSINEO; GUSTAVO POLITIS; CRISTIAN KAUFMANN; MARÍA PAULA BARROS; MARÍA CLARA ALVAREZ; VIOLETA DI PRADO; NÉLIDA PAL; ALEJANDRA MATARRESE; NAHUEL SCHEIFLER
Lugar:
París
Reunión:
Congreso; 18th IUPPS WORLD CONGRESS; 2018
Institución organizadora:
Union Internationale des Sciences Préhistoriques et Protohistoriques
Resumen:
The Pampa grassland of Argentina is a vast plain only interrupted by the Tandilia and Ventania hill ranges, located in the central east of Argentina. Since the early peopling of the region, during the end of the Pleistocene, these ranges have had a spiritual connotation for pre-historic hunter-gatherers. One example is the deliberated abandonment of particular lithic tools such as shtail projectile points in particular buttes. Along the Holocene the hills were also used as support for rock art and their abundant primary and secondary outcropsconstituted the main areas for the acquisition of raw materials for manufacturing stone tools. In this paper, we present and discuss the main results of Calera, a ritual site located in a high valley in the north-western sector of the Tandilia hill range. This context has been interpreted as a place where a series of ritual activities were performed by hunter-gatherers during periods of band aggregation between ca. 3400 and 1700 14C years BP. The Calera site consists of four intentionally excavated pits lled with a large amount ofofferings and ceremonial trash. This thick deposits were separated by two levels of slabs indicating persistent events of occupation. Among the offering material, some are of a high symbolic value such as a carved plaque, a polished axe, a shell bead, a decorated guanaco bezoar stone, and potsherds with gurative motifs. Bones from some carnivores species, rarely found in Pampean sites, were also recovered. Moreover, skeletal parts from at least 22 different species, with evidence of human exploitation, were found. These includes the bones of guanaco (Lama guanicoe, NMI= 54). Other materials buried in the pits compriseshundreds of knapping and ground stone tools used to process dierent resources such as wood, bone, soft vegetables, and skin, abundant mineral pigments of different colors, and sherds form large ceramic vessels used to store and/or serve foods and drinks. One of the remarkable characteristic of the site is the presence of items coming from long distances. Calera is interpreted as a Late Holocene locality with a great symbolic signicance, due to its strategic location in the landscape. Several lines of evidence support the idea that thenorth-western sector of the Tandilia hill range was a place where hunter-gatherer bands from different territories performed meeting and ceremonies, which involved different generations and groups through time.