New Absolute Chronological Constraints to La Playa (Sonoran Desert) Archaeology between the American Southwest and Mesoamerica—From Long Period Human Resilience to Apparent Abandonment

Author:

Goguitchaichvili Avto12ORCID,Villapando Elisa3,Abrego Alejandra3,Cejudo Rubén1,Kravchinsky Vadim2,Bautista Francisco4ORCID,García Karla Flores1,Morales Juan1ORCID,Cervantes Miguel1

Affiliation:

1. National Archaeomagnetic Service, Institute of Geophysics Campus Morelia, UNAM, Michoacán 58190, Mexico

2. Geophysics, Department of Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E1, Canada

3. National Institute of Anthropology and History, Centro INAH Sonora, Sonora 83080, Mexico

4. Laboratorio Universitario de Geofísica Ambiental, Centro de Investigaciones en Geografía Ambiental, UNAM, Michoacán 58190, Mexico

Abstract

Sonoran Desert archaeological settlement is one of the most representative sites in Northwestern Mexico/Southwestern United States of the Early Agriculture period because of various cultural processes involved, such as the introduction of the first cultigens and the construction of Pit Houses. These early desert village settlements used geomorphological features of the local landscape to facilitate their sophisticated form of agriculture. Most of the features and artifacts at the site are associated with the Early Agricultural period of 3150-1900 cal B.P., while most occupation dates are in the Cienega phase (2800-1900 cal B.P.). Later stages are poorly documented because of the apparent reduction in population, less marked archaeological features, and extreme erosion processes. Systematic archaeological excavation revealed evidence of completely burned Pit Houses. We analyzed 56 samples belonging to four Pit Houses and one different combustion feature (Kiln or Horno, as they are locally known) in different areas of the settlement. The experimental procedure included continuous susceptibility vs. temperature measurements and step-wise alternating field demagnetizations. Only 36 samples yielded technically acceptable determinations that allowed the determination of archaeomagnetic directions. Statistically indistinguishable results were obtained from all five studied features. This finding reinforces archaeological evidence of ritual-related paraphernalia and/or apparent abandonment or, at least, migration.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

Reference35 articles.

1. Byrd, R. (2012). Biological Interaction of the First Forager-Farmers in the Sonora Desert. [Ph.D. Thesis, The University of Arizona].

2. Schlanger, S.H. (2000, January 2–4). Of maize and migration: Mode and tempo in the diffusion of Zea mays in Northwest Mexico and the American Southwest. Traditions, Transitions, and Technologies: Themes in Southwestern Archaeology, Proceedings of the 2000 Southwest Symposium, Boulder, CO, USA.

3. Huckell, B.B. (1995). Of Marshes and Maize: Preceramic Agricultural Settlements in the Cienega Valley, Southeastern Arizona, University of Arizona Press.

4. Huckell, B.B., and Huckell, L.W. (1988, January 7–10). Crops come to the desert: Late preceramic agriculture in southeastern Arizona. Proceedings of the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Society of American Archaeology, Phoenix, AZ, USA.

5. The archaic prehistory of the North American Southwest;Huckell;J. World Prehistory,1996

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