Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T04:10:42.810Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Agro-pastoralism and social change in the Cuzco heartland of Peru: a brief history using environmental proxies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Alex Chepstow-Lusty*
Affiliation:
Institut Français d'Etudes Andines (IFEA), Av. Arequipa 4500, Lima 18, Peru; Centre for Bio-Archaeology and Ecology, Université Montpellier 2, Montpellier, France (Email: [email protected])

Extract

The author shows how pollen and oribatid mites recovered from the small lake of Marcacocha provide a detailed proxy record of agro-pastoralism over the last 4200 years in the central Andes. The introduction of highland maize and weeding practices 2700 years ago corresponds with major settlement development, as well as evidence for large herds of llamas not only facilitating trade but supplying abundant fertilizer and fuel in the form of excrement. Prolonged droughts and pre-Colombian epidemics probably influenced many of the social changes observed.

Type
Method
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

De Acosta, J. 1590, in Franch, J. A. (ed.) [1986]. Historia natural y moral de las Indias (Cr´onicas de América 34). Madrid: Historia 16.Google Scholar
Bauer, B. 2004. Ancient Cuzco: heartland of the Inca. Austin (TX): University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Bauer, B. S. & Kellett, L. C. 2010. Cultural transformations of the Chanka heartland (Andahuaylas, Peru) during the Late Intermediate period (AD 1000-1400). Latin American Antiquity 21(1): 87111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beresford-Jones, D.G., Arce, S., Whaley, O. Q. & Chepstow-Lusty, A. 2009. The role of Prosopis in ecological and landscape change in the Samaca Basin, Lower Ica Valley, south coast Peru from the Early Horizon to the Late Intermediate period. Latin American Antiquity 20(2): 303332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruno, M. C. & Whitehead, W.T. 2003. Chenopodium cultivation and Formative period agriculture at Chiripa, Bolivia. Latin American Antiquity 14(3): 339–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carcelén Reluz, C.G. 2007. Idolatr´ia ind´igena y devoci´on criolla como respuestas a la variabilidad climática en Lima y Huarochir´i durante el siglo XVIII. Investigaciones Sociales 19:71186.Google Scholar
Chávez, K.L.M. 1980. The archaeology of Marcavalle, an Early Horizon site in the Valley of Cuzco, Peru: Part 1. Baessler Archiv, neue Folge, 29(1): 107205.Google Scholar
Chávez, S.J. & Thompson, R. 2006. Early maize in the Copacabana Peninsula: implications for the archaeology of the Lake Titicaca Basin, in Staller, J., Benz, B. & Tykot, R. (ed.) Histories of Maize: 415–28. San Diego (CA): Academic Press.Google Scholar
Chepstow-Lusty, A. & Winfield, M. 2000. Agroforestry by the Inca: lessons from the past. Ambio 29(6): 322–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chepstow-Lusty, A., Bennett, K. D., Switsur, V. R. & Kendall, A. 1996. 4000 years of human impact and vegetation change in the central Peruvian Andes—with events parallelling the Maya record? Antiquity 70:823–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chepstow-Lusty, A., Bennett, K. D., Fjeldså, J., Kendall, A., Galiano, W. & Tupayachi Herrera, A. 1998. Tracing 4000 years of environmental history in the Cuzco area, Peru, from the pollen record. Mountain Research and Development 18:159–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chepstow-Lusty, A., Frogley, M. R., Bauer, B. S., Bush, M. B. & Herrera, A. T. 2003. A Late Holocene record of arid events from the Cuzco region, Peru. Journal of Quaternary Science 18:491502.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chepstow-Lusty, A., Frogley, M. R., Bauer, B. S., Leng, M. J., Cundy, A., Boessenkool, K. P. & Gioda, A. 2007. Evaluating socio-economic change in the Andes using oribatid mite abundances as indicators of domestic animal densities. Journal of Archaeological Science 34:1178–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chepstow-Lusty, A., Frogley, M. R., Bauer, B. S., Leng, M. J., Boessenkool, K. P., Carcaillet, C., Ali, A. A. & Gioda, A. 2009. Putting the rise of the Inca Empire within a climatic and land management context. Climate of the Past 5:114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooke, C. A., Balcomb, P. H., Biesterc, H. & Wolfe, A. P. 2009. Over three millennia of mercury pollution in the Peruvian Andes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106(22): 8830–34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ellis, B. A., Rotz, L. D., Leake, J.A.D., Samalvides, F., Bernable, J., Vemtura, G., Padilla, C., Villaseca, P., Beati, L., Regnery, R., Childs, J. E., Olson, J. G. & Carrillo, C. P. 1999. An outbreak of Acute Bartonellosis (Oroya fever) in the Urubamba region of Peru, 1998. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 61(2): 344–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Esquivel Y Navia, D. 1749 [1980]. Noticias cronol´ogicas de la gran ciudad del Cuzco. Edici´on, pr´ologo y notas de F. Denegri Luna con la colaboraci´on de H. Villanueva Urteaga y C. Gutiérrez Mu˜noz. Tomos 1 y 2. Lima: Fundaci´on Augusto N. Finucane, B. 2009. Maize and sociopolitical complexity in the Ayacucho Valley, Peru. Current Anthropology 50(4): 535–45.Google Scholar
Garcilaso De La Vega, I. 1609 [1966]. Royal commentaries of the Incas and general history of Peru, Parts 1 and 2. Translated by Livermore, H. V.Austin (TX): University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Glave, L. M. & Remy, M. I. 1983. Estructura agraria y vida rural en una regi´on andina: Ollantaytambo entre los siglos XV1–XIX (Archivos de historia andina 3). Cuzco: Centro de Estudios Rurales Andinos ‘Bartolomé de las Casas’.Google Scholar
De Henestrosa, J. 1582 [1965]. La descripcion que se hizo en la provincia de Xauxa por la instrucion de S. M. que a la dicha provincia se invio de molde, in Jimenez de la Espada, M. (ed.) Relaciones geográphicas de Indias-Perú (Biblioteca de autores españoles 183-85): 166–75. Madrid: Ediciones Atlas.Google Scholar
Heggarty, P. & Beresford-Jones, D. 2010. Agriculture and language dispersals: limitations, refinements, and an Andean exception? Current Anthropology 51(2): 129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johannessen, S. & Hastorf, C. 1990. A history of fuel management (AD 500 to the present) in the Mantaro Valley, Peru. Journal of Ethnobiology 10:6190.Google Scholar
Kendall, A. & Chepstow-Lusty, A. 2006. Cultural and environmental change in the Cuzco region of Peru: the rural development implications of combined archaeological and palaeoecological evidence, in Dransart, P. (ed.) Kay Pacha: Cultivating earth and water in the Andes (British Archaeological Reports international series 1478): 185–97. Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
National Research Council. 1989. Lost crops of the Incas: little-known plants of the Andes with promise for worldwide cultivation. Washington (DC): National Academy Press.Google Scholar
Pachacuti Yamqui, J.D.S. 1613 [1950]. Relacion de antiguedades deste reyno del Piru, in Jimenez de la Espada, M. (ed.) Tres relaciones de antigüedades Peruanas: 207281. Asunci´on del Paraguay: Editorial Guarania.Google Scholar
Rowe, J. H. 1943. Chanapata: La cultura pre-Incaica del Cuzco. Tupac Amaru: 2:41–3.Google Scholar
Seltzer, G. & Hastorf, C. 1990. Climatic change and its effect on Prehispanic agriculture in the central Peruvian Andes. Journal of Field Archaeology 17:397414.Google Scholar
Shimada, I., Schaaf, C. B., Thompson, L. G. & Mosley-Thompson, E. 1991. Cultural impacts of severe droughts in the prehistoric Andes: applications of a 1500-year ice core precipitation record. World Archaeology 22(3): 247–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sillar, B. 2000. Dung by preference: the choice of fuel as an example of how Andean pottery production is embedded within wider technical, social and economic practices. Archaeometry 42(1): 4360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, L. G., Mosley-Thompson, E., Davis, M. E., Lin, P.-N., Henderson, K. A., Cole-Dai, J., Bolzan, J. F. & Liu, K.-B. 1995. Late glacial stage and Holocene tropical ice core records from Huascaran, Peru. Science 269:4650.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tupayachi Herrera, A. 1993. Forestales Nativos Andinos en Frutos. Abad del Cusco, Peru: Universidad Nacional de San Antonio.Google Scholar
Valencia, B. G., Urrego, D. H., Silman, M. R. & Bush, M. B. 2010. From ice age to modern: a record of landscape change in an Andean cloud forest. Journal of Biogeography 37(9): 1637–47, doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2699.2010.02318.x.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Geel, B., Buurman, J. & Waterbolk, H. T. 1996. Archaeological and palaeoecological indicators for an abrupt climate change in The Netherlands and evidence for climatological connections around 2650 BP. Journal of Quaternary Science 11:451–60.3.0.CO;2-9>CrossRefGoogle Scholar