A Zooarchaeological Test for Dietary Resource Depression at the End of the Classic Period in the Petexbatun,Guatemala |
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Authors: | Kitty F. Emery |
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Affiliation: | (1) Environmental Archaeology, Florida Museum of Natural History, Gainesville, FL 32611-7800, USA |
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Abstract: | Zooarchaeological analyses of animal remains from the Petexbatun sites in the Guatemalan lowlands provide proxy evidence to test a hypothesis of dietary insufficiency during the Maya “collapse.” Ecological foraging theory and resource depression models are used to interpret animal use patterns before and after the disintegration of the Petexbatun polity at the end of the Late Classic period (around a.d. 800). Environmental failure models of the Maya “collapse” at the end of the Late Classic imply that a dietary insufficiency, and particularly a lack of animal resources, was associated with the political and social transitions of this period. However, the results of this zooarchaeological study do not support this hypothesis and point instead to very limited early reductions of only highest-ranked dietary species. The lack of evidence for specific resource depression associated directly with the period of political collapse does not support a model of environmental failure during political disintegration in the Petexbatun. Correlations are found between animal use patterns and the specifics of site size and periods of peak political activity, suggesting that small-scale resource depressions might have resulted at some sites during early periods of human population growth, site expansion, and increasing political activity. |
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Keywords: | Maya collapse Dietary breadth Resource depression Zooarchaeology Classic Maya |
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