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Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

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Archaeological applications of stable isotope analysis: subsistence and residential mobility in the Chao Valley of Peru. Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Archaeological applications of stable isotope analysis: subsistence and residential mobility in the Chao Valley of Peru Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee
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Page 1: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Archaeological applications of stable isotope analysis: subsistence and residential mobility in the Chao Valley of Peru

Jonathan D. Bethard, MADepartment of AnthropologyThe University of Tennessee

Page 2: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

“For in the seemingly little and insignificant things that accumulate to create a lifetime, the essence of our existence is captured.”

– James Deetz (1977)

Page 3: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Research Goals

1) Utilize established isotopic methods to investigate diet and residential mobility at Santa Rita B

2) Define previously unreported isotopic ranges for the Chao Valley

Page 4: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Location of Site

Santa Rita B

N

Page 5: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

CA3

Page 6: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

CA3

Page 7: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Demographics from CA3Entierro Sex Age

1 F 15 – 18

2 M 25 – 30

3 ? 10 – 12

4 ? 5 – 9

5 ? 10 –12

8 M 35 – 40

9 M? 12 – 16

10 ? 8 – 10

11 ? 9 – 11

TOTAL n = 9

* AMS Dates: cal. AD 1030 - 1240

Page 8: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Entierro 2 Entierro 3 Entierro 9

Page 9: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Stable Isotope Analyses

• Human bones/teeth reflect the isotopic composition of consumed foods

– Collagen and apatite

• Carbon isotopes: differentiate type of consumed plants

• Nitrogen isotopes: differentiate terrestrial from marine protein sources

• Strontium isotopes: reflect geological bedrock and differentiate locals from non-locals

Page 10: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Materials and Methods

• Samples obtained during 2006/2007 field seasons

• Collagen: Ambrose (1990)

• Apatite: Balasse et al. (2002)– Finnigan MAT 252 mass spectrometer interfaced with an

Elemental Analyzer and Kiel III Device

• Sr purified following Pin and Bassin (1992)– Nu Plasma Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass

Spectrometer

Page 11: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee
Page 12: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee
Page 13: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Chao Valley Strontium• Petford and colleagues (1996)

– 0.704108 to 0.705710

N

Local Range (Santa Rita B):0.7050 – 0.7056

Local Range (Moche):0.7069 – 0.7087

Page 14: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee
Page 15: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Discussion

• 1) C/N isotopes are effective for evaluating diet– Maize-based agriculture

– Coastal location not a definite indicator of marine consumption

• 2) Sr isotopes are effective for characterizing mobility– ‘Local’ signature must be established first

– Useful for determining if non-locals are present

Page 16: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Future Directions

• Continue using carbon isotopes to investigate introduction of maize

• Investigate geography and marine resource exploitation

• Characterize other north coast Sr local signatures

Page 17: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

Acknowledgements

• Dr. Stanley Ambrose

• Dr. Kelly Knudson

• Dr. Lori Baker

• Justin Glessner, MS

• UIUC and ISGS laboratory personnel

• Dr. Dan Weinand

• Prof. Marty Salter

• Dr. Ann Kronk

• National Institute of Culture – (Peru)

• Profs. Victor Vasquez and Teresa Rosales

• Dr. Jonathan Kent

• Dr. Catherine Gaither

The William M. Bass Endowment funded this research.

Page 18: Jonathan D. Bethard, MA Department of Anthropology The University of Tennessee

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