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| DOI | 10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0288798 | ||||
| Año | 2023 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
The timing of Tiwanaku’s collapse remains contested. Here we present a generational-scale chronology of Tiwanaku using Bayesian models of 102 radiocarbon dates, including 45 unpublished dates. This chronology tracks four community practices: residing short- vs. long-term, constructing monuments, discarding decorated ceramics, and leaving human burials. Tiwanaku was founded around AD 100 and around AD 600, it became the region’s principal destination for migrants. It grew into one of the Andes’ first cities and became famous for its decorated ceramics, carved monoliths, and large monuments. Our Bayesian models show that monument building ended ~AD 720 (the median of the ending boundary). Around ~AD 910, burials in tombs ceased as violent deaths began, which we document for the first time in this paper. Ritualized murders are limited to the century leading up to ~AD 1020. Our clearest proxy for social networks breaking down is a precise estimate for the end of permanent residence, ~AD 1010 (970–1050, 95%). This major inflection point was followed by visitors who used the same ceramics until ~AD 1040. Temporary camps lasted until roughly ~AD 1050. These four events suggest a rapid, city-wide collapse at ~AD 1010–1050, lasting just ~20 years (0–70 years, 95%). These results suggest a cascading breakdown of community practices and social networks that were physically anchored at Tiwanaku, though visitors continued to leave informal burials for centuries. This generation-scale chronology suggests that collapse 1) took place well before reduced precipitation, hence this was not a drought-induced societal change and 2) a few resilient communities sustained some traditions at other sites, hence the chronology for the site of Tiwanaku cannot be transposed to all sites with similar material culture.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Marsh, Erik J. | Hombre |
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo - Argentina
UNIV NACL CUYO - Argentina |
| 2 | Vranich, Alexei | - |
University of Warsaw - Polonia
Univ Warsaw - Polonia |
| 3 | Blom, Deborah | - |
The University of Vermont - Estados Unidos
Univ Vermont - Estados Unidos |
| 4 | Bruno, Maria | - |
Dickinson College - Estados Unidos
Dickinson Coll - Estados Unidos |
| 5 | Davis, Katharine | - |
Ursinus College - Estados Unidos
Ursinus Coll - Estados Unidos |
| 6 | Augustine, Jonah | - |
University of Wisconsin-Madison - Estados Unidos
UNIV WISCONSIN - Estados Unidos |
| 7 | Couture, Nicole C. | - |
Université McGill - Canadá
MCGILL UNIV - Canadá |
| 8 | Ancapichun, Santiago | Hombre |
Universidad de Magallanes - Chile
|
| 9 | Knudson, Kelly J. | Mujer |
Arizona State University - Estados Unidos
Arizona State Univ - Estados Unidos |
| 10 | Popović, Danijela | - |
Centrum Nowych Technologii Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego - Polonia
Univ Warsaw - Polonia University of Warsaw - Polonia |
| 11 | Cunietti, Gianni | - |
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo - Argentina
UNIV NACL CUYO - Argentina |
| Fuente |
|---|
| National Science Foundation |
| Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research |
| Yale University |
| National Science Centre, Poland |
| Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada |
| McGill University |
| Narodowym Centrum Nauki |
| Fond Québécois de Recherches sur la Société et la Culture |
| Consejo de Ayllus y Comunidades Originarios de Tiwanaku |
| University of British Columbia Library, Vancouver and 3 |
| CIAAAT |
| Canadian Foundation for Innovation Infrastructure |
| Centro de Investigaciones Arqueológicas, Antropológicas y Administración de Tiwanaku |
| University of Vermont’s College of Arts and Science |
| University of Vermont's College of Arts and Science |
| Fond Quebecois de Recherches sur la Societeet la Culture, Nouveau Chercheur Grant |
| Canadian Foundation for Innovation Infrastructure Grant |
| Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Standard Research Grant |
| Agradecimiento |
|---|
| Excavation and radiocarbon dating was funded by the following institutions. To Alexei Vranich: National Science Foundation (IIS-0431070, BCS-0415914) To Deborah Blom: National Science Foundation (BSC-1317184), The University of Vermont’s College of Arts and Science, The Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research To Nicole C. Couture: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Standard Research Grant (410-2006-1806), The Canadian Foundation for Innovation Infrastructure Grant (202493), Fond Québécois de Recherches sur la Société et la Culture, Nouveau Chercheur Grant (116296), McGill University Faculty of Arts Research Fund To Kelly J. Knudson: National Science Foundation (BCS-1523209) To Danijela Popović: National Science Centre, Poland. 2014/15/ D/NZ8/00285. We are grateful to colleagues who provided unpublished data, difficult-to-find references, and nurtured our thinking over the years: John Janusek (†), Linda Manzanilla, Giles Morrow, Andy Roddick, Scott Smith, and Jason Yaeger. Scans of Bennett’s aerial photographs were provided courtesy of 1) Anna Guengerich, 2) Erwin Wodarczak and Candice Bjur, University Archives, University of British Columbia Library, Vancouver and 3) Maureen White, Division of Anthropology, Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University (see S5 File). Thanks to Andrew Millard and Christopher Bronk Ramsey for help with the OxCal inline arrays. The authors would like to express their gratitude to the Centro de Investigaciones Arqueológicas, Antropológicas y Administración de Tiwanaku (CIAAAT) for providing access to the facilities and research collections at Tiwanaku. We are also grateful to state and local organizations in Bolivia for granting permission to carry out archaeological research at Tiwanaku, including CIAAAT, the Unidad de Arqueología y Museos, Ministerio de Cultura, the community of Wankollo, the municipality of Tiahuanaco, and the Consejo de Ayllus y Comunidades Originarios de Tiwanaku. Finally, we are profoundly grateful to our friends in the town of Tiwanaku and the many Bolivian and North American students and colleagues who have worked with us. |
| Excavation and radiocarbon dating was funded by the following institutions. To Alexei Vranich: National Science Foundation (IIS-0431070, BCS-0415914) To Deborah Blom: National Science Foundation (BSC-1317184), The University of Vermont's College of Arts and Science, The Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research To Nicole C. Couture: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Standard Research Grant (410-2006-1806), The Canadian Foundation for Innovation Infrastructure Grant (202493), Fond Quebecois de Recherches sur la Societeet la Culture, Nouveau Chercheur Grant (116296), McGill University Faculty of Arts Research Fund To Kelly J. Knudson: National Science Foundation (BCS-1523209) To Danijela Popovi & cacute;: National Science Centre, Poland. 2014/15/D/NZ8/00285. |