A provenance study of archaeological obsidian from the Andahuaylas region of southern Peru

LC Kellett, M Golitko, BS Bauer - Journal of Archaeological Science, 2013 - Elsevier
Journal of Archaeological Science, 2013Elsevier
To date, most obsidian sourcing studies in the Andes have concentrated on the highlands
and Titicaca Basin of far southern Peru and northern Bolivia. Toward achieving a more
complete understanding of the region, this paper offers new data on the long-term
prehistoric obsidian procurement and consumption patterns in the Andahuaylas region of
the south-central Peruvian highlands. Obsidian sourcing data from Andahuaylas are
particularly interesting since the area is centrally located among several important regional …
To date, most obsidian sourcing studies in the Andes have concentrated on the highlands and Titicaca Basin of far southern Peru and northern Bolivia. Toward achieving a more complete understanding of the region, this paper offers new data on the long-term prehistoric obsidian procurement and consumption patterns in the Andahuaylas region of the south-central Peruvian highlands. Obsidian sourcing data from Andahuaylas are particularly interesting since the area is centrally located among several important regional obsidian sources. A total of 94 obsidian samples from a range of sites of different temporal periods were chemically analyzed using portable X-ray fluorescence (PXRF), as well as laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). The results demonstrate a number of interesting trends, the first of which is the long-term importance of the Potreropampa obsidian source to populations of the Andahuaylas region from at least the early Formative period (∼2500 BCE). Secondly, the results indicate that procurement strategies by local populations in Andahuaylas were primarily reliant on nearby (<150 km) obsidian sources. Finally, the paucity of more distant, yet widely exchanged, high quality obsidian (i.e., Chivay, Alca) confirm that as a region, Andahuaylas was more heavily connected economically (and likely culturally) with local areas to the south (Apurímac) and to the west (Ayacucho).
Elsevier
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