SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.9 issue1MORFOANATOMÍA DEL TALLO CON CRECIMIENTO SECUNDARIO DE ESPECIES DE JATROPHA (EUPHORBIACEAE) NATIVAS DE LA REGIÓN CHAQUEÑA ARGENTINA Y SU RELACIÓN CON EL AMBIENTEGENETIC DIVERSITY AND FRAGMENTATION OF ASPIDOSPERMA QUEBRACHO-BLANCO (APOCYNACEAE) NATURAL HABITATS, CONSERVATION ISSUES IN CHACO FOREST AND SAVANNA BIOMES author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

  • Have no cited articlesCited by SciELO

Related links

Share


Darwiniana, nueva serie

Print version ISSN 0011-6793On-line version ISSN 1850-1699

Abstract

LONGO, Agustina. CONSUMO Y MANEJO DE PLANTAS DURANTE EL PRIMER Y SEGUNDO MILENIO D.C. EN TRES SITIOS ARQUEOLÓGICOS DEL VALLE DE SANTA MARÍA (CATAMARCA-TUCUMÁN, ARGENTINA). Darwiniana, nueva serie [online]. 2021, vol.9, n.1, pp.95-114.  Epub Aug 01, 2021. ISSN 0011-6793.  http://dx.doi.org/10.14522/darwiniana.2021.91.939.

Longo, A. 2021. Plant consumption and management during the first and second millennium AD at three archaeological sites in Santa María valley (Catamarca-Tucumán, Argentina). Darwiniana, nueva serie 9(1): 95-114.

This paper analyses the practices related to the consumption and management of plants in the central-western sector of the Santa María valley (Catamarca-Tucumán) during the first and second millennium AD. For this purpose, we worked with macroremains recovered in the occupation floors and with microremains present in ceramic vessels from the archaeological sites Morro del Fraile, El Carmen 1, and El Carmen 2. A total of 546 carpological macroremains corresponding to seven families, Amaranthaceae, Cactaceae, Cucurbitaceae, Fabaceae, Malvaceae, Poaceae and Solanaceae, and 10 microremains from the families Cucurbitaceae and Poaceae, were identified. The similarities between El Carmen 2 enclosure 2 and Morro del Fraile rock shelter suggest that sites occupied since the first millennium AD would have taken advantage of a greater diversity of plants, which in turn show a great diversity of management practices, in relation to sites occupied from the second millennium A.D., as observed in El Carmen 1 enclosures 1 and 13. The similarities between El Carmen 2 enclosure 2 and Morro del Fraile rock shelter would also indicate a diversity of contexts within the second millennium AD, with spaces that show a lower diversity of plants (El Carmen 1 enclosures 1 and 13) and spaces that, during the second millennium AD, exhibit practices that refer to those known for the villages of the first millennium AD (Morro del Fraile rock shelter), such as the consumption of a great diversity of wild, weedy and domesticated plants, with a predominance of Trichocereus and various Amaranthaceae.

Keywords : Archaeobotany; first and second millennium A.D.; macroremains; microremains; residential spaces; Santa Maria valley..

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish     · Spanish ( pdf )