INVESTIGADORES
FERNANDEZ Fernando Julian
artículos
Título:
Animal food during the late prehispanic period at Sierras of Córdoba, Argentina. a zooarchaeological view from Boyo Paso 2
Autor/es:
MATÍAS MEDINA; MAILÍN CAMPOS; NANCY ÁVILA; ESTEBAN SOILBENZON; FERNÁNDEZ, FERNANDO JULIÁN
Revista:
ANTHROPOZOOLOGICA
Editorial:
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
Referencias:
Lugar: Paris; Año: 2019 vol. 54 p. 83 - 95
ISSN:
0761-3032
Resumen:
How prehispanic foragers adjusted their foraging activities to plant cultivation is a question that drives much of the modern archaeological research. As a result, the spread of food-producing economies during the Late Prehispanic Period from Sierras of Córdoba (ca. 1500-360 year BP, Argentina) has been recently defined as a dynamic sociocultural process, where a mixed foraging and cultivation economy was accompanied by a flexible land-use strategy. However, the economic organization has only been superficially assessed. Thus, the aim of this article is to present the study of faunal remains recovered during the excavation of the open-air site Boyo Paso 2 in order to provide primary data on the properties of the animal food remains left by late prehispanic people and the characteristic of site occupation. Faunal remains suggest a complex sequence of reoccupations were bones where deposited, accidentally reburned and fragmented by trampling. The diversity of prey exploited also sheds light that broad spectrum hunting continued playing a key role in the daily subsistence, instead cultigens were a fluctuating components in a diverse foraging economy in which wild resources as guanaco (Lama guanicoe), small-vertebrates and Rheidae eggs continued to be extensively used. The study of Boyo Paso 2 faunal assemblage is relevant because hopeful help inverses the current understanding of the economic importance of foraging wild resources and would constitute a model to interpret other archaeological cases during the Neolithic or Formative transition, where the boundaries between farming and foraging were fluid, but remained relatively invisible according to the existing terminology.