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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 105(14): 5315-20, 2008 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18391213

ABSTRACT

Mixtec nobles are depicted in codices and other proto-historic documentation taking part in funerary rites involving cremation. The time depth for this practice was unknown, but excavations at the early village site of Tayata, in the southern state of Oaxaca, Mexico, recovered undisturbed cremation burials in contexts dating from the eleventh century B.C. These are the earliest examples of a burial practice that in later times was reserved for Mixtec kings and Aztec emperors. This article describes the burial contexts and human remains, linking Formative period archaeology with ethnohistorical descriptions of Mixtec mortuary practices. The use of cremation to mark elevated social status among the Mixtec was established by 3,000 years ago, when hereditary differences in rank were first emerging across Mesoamerica.


Subject(s)
Mortuary Practice/history , Archaeology , Funeral Rites/history , History, Ancient , Humans , Mexico , Social Class
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 102(32): 11219-23, 2005 Aug 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16061797

ABSTRACT

Petrographic analysis of Formative Mexican ceramics by J. B. Stoltman et al. (see the companion piece in this issue of PNAS) refutes a recent model of Olmec "one-way" trade. In this paper, we address the model's more fundamental problems of sampling bias, anthropological implausibility, and logical non sequiturs. No bridging argument exists to link motifs on pottery to the social, political, and religious institutions of the Olmec. In addition, the model of unreciprocated exchange is implausible, given everything that the anthropological and ethnohistoric records tell us about non-Western societies of that general sociopolitical level.


Subject(s)
Archaeology/methods , Ceramics , Commerce/history , Indians, North American , Models, Theoretical , Commerce/economics , History, Ancient , Humans , Mexico , Regression Analysis , Research Design , Selection Bias
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