BIOLOGICAL DISTANCE PATTERNS AMONG THE NORTHERN MOCHE LORDS: DENTAL PHENOTYPES AND POLITICAL ORGANIZATION IN ANCIENT PERU

被引:4
|
作者
Klaus, Haagen D. [1 ]
Alva, Walter [2 ]
Bourget, Steve [3 ]
Chero, Luis [4 ]
机构
[1] George Mason Univ, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, 4400 Univ Dr, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA
[2] Museo Tumbas Reales Sipan, Juan Pablo Vizcardo y Guzman 895, Lambayeque, Peru
[3] Musee Quai Branly, Dept Amer, Jacques Chirac 37 Quai Branly, F-75007 Paris, France
[4] Museo Sitio Huaca Rajada Sipan, CPM Sipan, Ave Augusto B Leguia, Lambayeque, Peru
关键词
CROWN; SIZE;
D O I
10.1017/laq.2018.46
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Between AD 100 and 800, the Moche culture emerged on the north coast of Peru. Diverse debates surround the nature of Moche territorial and political centralization, sociopolitical identities, and the internal social diversity of Moche society. Here we address some of these issues in a biodistance study based on phenotypic variation of inherited dental traits within and between 36 individuals in the royal tombs of Sipan (Lambayeque valley), Ucupe (Zana valley), and Dos Cabezas (Jequetepeque valley). Metric and nonmetric dental trait data were analyzed using hierarchical cluster and R-matrix analyses. The results independently indicate that the highest-level Sipan and Dos Cabezas lords likely represented different endogamous kin groups, while limited gene flow occurred between groups of Moche lower nobility between the Lambayeque and Jequetepeque regions. Although biology and material cultural link the Lord of Ucupe to Dos Cabezas, many objects in his tomb demonstrate his participation the world of the Sipan elites. These Moche lords were, on some levels, bioculturally interconnected. Nonetheless, the data broadly lend support to a "many Moches" model of sociopolitical structure, further casting doubt on earlier one-dimensional visions of a centralized hegemonic Moche polity.
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页码:696 / 717
页数:22
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