Los orígenes del privilegio en el Soconusco, 1650 a.c.: dos décadas de investigación

John E. Clark Orcid
Mary E. Pye
Publicado: dic 1, 2006


Sección : Notas de investigación y reseñas

Creative Commons License

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0.

Contenido principal del artículo

Contenido principal del artículo

Resumen

En este trabajo presentamos los resultados más sobresalientes de las investigaciones arqueológicas practicadas desde 1985 en el Soconusco, Chiapas, México.

Palabras clave:
arqueología Soconusco

Metrícas

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Métricas

Cargando métricas ...

Detalles del artículo

Cómo citar
Clark, J. E., & Pye, M. E. (2006). Los orígenes del privilegio en el Soconusco, 1650 a.c.: dos décadas de investigación. Revista Pueblos Y Fronteras Digital, 1(2), 1–54. https://doi.org/10.22201/cimsur.18704115e.2006.2.249

Ambrose, Stanley y Lynette Norr, 1992, “On Stable Isotopic Data and Prehistoric Subsistence in the Soconusco Region”. Current Anthropology, núm. 33, pp. 401-404.

Ardern, Wayne, 2003, “Early Formative Mortuary Practices and Social Organization in Mazatan, Chiapas, Mexico”. Tesis de maestría, Departamento de Antropología, Brigham Young University, Provo.

Arroyo, Bárbara, 2002, “Appendix I: Classification of La Blanca Figurines”. En Early Complex Society in Pacific Guatemala: Settlements and Chronology of the Río Naranjo, Guatemala, por Michael W. Love, pp. 205-235. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 66. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Blake, Michael, 1991, “An Emerging Early Formative Chiefdom at Paso de la Amada, Chiapas, Mexico”. En The Formation of Complex Society in Southeastern Mesoamerica, editado por W. Fowler, Jr., pp. 27-46. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL.

Blake, Michael, Brian Chisholm, John E. Clark y Karen Mudar, 1992a, “Non-Agricultural Staples and Agricultural Supplements: Early Formative Subsistence in the Soconusco Region, Mexico”. En Transitions to Agriculture, editado por T. D. Price y A. B. Gebauer, pp. 133-151. Prehistory Press, Madison.

Blake, Michael T., Brian S. Chisholm, John E. Clark, Barbara Voorhies y Michael W. Love, 1992b, “Prehistoric Subsistence in the Soconusco Region”. Current Anthropology, núm. 33, pp. 83-94.

Blake, Michael y John E. Clark, 1999, “The Emergence of Hereditary Inequality: The Case of Pacific Coastal Chiapas, Mexico”. En Pacific Latin American in Prehistory, editado por M. Blake, pp. 55-73. Washington State University Press, Pullman.

Blake, Michael, John E. Clark, Barbara Voorhies, George Michaels, Michael Love, Mary Pye, Arthur Demarest y Barbara Arroyo, 1995, “Radiocarbon Chronology for the Late Archaic and Formative Periods on the Pacific Coast of Southeastern Mesoamerica”. Ancient Mesoamerica, núm. 6, pp. 16l-183.

Carlson, John B., 1981, “Olmec Concave Iron-Ore Mirrors: The Aesthetics of a Lithic Technology and the Lord of the Mirror (with an Illustrated Catalogue of Mirrors)”. En The Olmec and Their Neighbors, editado por E. Benson, pp. 117-147. Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D. C.

Ceja Tenorio, Jorge F., 1985, Paso de la Amada, An Early Preclassic Site in the Paso de la Amada, An Early Preclassic Site in the Soconusco, Chiapas, Mexico. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 49. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Chisholm, Brian, Michael Blake y Michael W. Love, 1993, “More on Prehistoric Subsistence in the Soconusco Region: Response to Ambrose and Norr”. Current Anthropology, núm. 34, pp. 432-434.

Clark, John E., 1981, “The Early Preclassic Obsidian Industry at Paso de la Amada, Chiapas, México”. Estudios de Cultura Maya, núm. 13, pp. 265-283.

Clark, John E., 1991, “The Beginnings of Mesoamerica: Apology for the Soconusco Early Formative”. En The Formation of Complex Society in Southeastern Mesoamerica, editado por W. Fowler, Jr., pp. 13-26. CRC, Boca Raton, FL.

Clark, John E., 1994, “The Development of Early Formative Rank Societies in the Soconusco, Chiapas, Mexico”. Tesis doctoral, Departamento de Antropología University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Clark, John E., 1996, “Craft Specialization and Olmec Civilization”. En Craft Specialization and Olmec Civilization, editado por B. Wailes, pp. 187-199. University Museum Monograph, núm. 93. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Clark, John E., 1997, “The Arts of Government in Early Mesoamerica”. Annual Review of Anthropology, núm. 26, pp. 211-234.

Clark, John E., 2003, “A Review of 20th Century Obsidian Studies”. En Mesoamerican Lithic Technology: Experimentation and Interpretation, editado por K. Hirth, et al., pp. 15-54. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.

Clark, John E., 2004a, “The Birth of Mesoamerican Metaphysics: Sedentism, Engagement, and Moral Superiority”. En Mesoamerican Archaeology, editado por J. Hendon y R. Joyce. Blackwell, Oxford.

Clark, John E., 2004b, “Mesoamerica Goes Public: Early Ceremonial Centers, Leaders, and Communities”. En Mesoamerican Archaeology, editado por J. Hendon y R. Joyce. Blackwell, Oxford.

Clark, John E., 2004c, “Surrounding the Sacred: Geometry and Design in Early Mound Groups as Meaning and Function”. En Big Mound Power: Faces of Southeastern Archaic Sociality, editado por J. L. Gibson y P. J. Carr. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.

Clark, John E. y Michael Blake, 1989, “El origen de la civilización en Mesoamérica: los olmecas y mokayas del Soconusco de Chiapas, México”. En El Preclásico o Formativo: avances y perspectivas, compilado por M. Carmona Macías, pp. 385-403. Instituto Nacional de Arqueología e Historia, México.

Clark, John E. y Michael Blake, 1994, “The Power of Prestige: Competitive Generosity and the Emergence of Rank Societies in Lowland Mesoamerica”. En Factional Competition and Political Development in the New World,editado por E. Brumfield y J. Fox, pp. 17-30. Cambridge University Press, Inglaterra.

Clark, John E. y David Cheetham, 2004, Cerámica formativa de Chiapas. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, México.

Clark, John E. y Dennis Gosser, 1995, “Reinventing Mesoamerica’s First Pottery”. En The Emergence of Pottery: Technology and Innovation in Ancient Societies, editado por W. Barnett y J. Hoopes, pp. 209-221. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C. y London.

Clark, John E. y Thomas A. Lee, Jr., 1984, “Formative Obsidian Exchange and the Emergence of Public Economies in Chiapas, Mexico”. En Trade and Exchange in Early Mesoamerica, editado por K. Hirth, pp. 235-274. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.

Clark, John E., Thomas A. Lee, Jr. y Tamara Salcedo, 1989, “The Distribution of Obsidian”. En Ancient Trade and Tribute: Economies of the Soconusco Region of Mesoamerica, editado por B. Voorhies, pp. 268-284. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.

Clark, John E. y William Parry, 1990, “Craft Specialization and Cultural Complexity”. Research in Economic Anthropology,núm. 12, pp. 289-346.

Clark, John E. y Mary E. Pye, 2000, “The Pacific Coast and the Olmec Question”. En Olmec Art and Archaeology in Mesoamerica, editado por J. Clark y M. Pye, pp. 217-251. Studies in the History of Art, núm. 58. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C.

Clark, John E. y Tamara Salcedo, 1989, “Ocos Obsidian Distribution in Chiapas, Mexico”. En New Frontiers in the Archaeology of the Pacific Coast of Southern Mesoamerica, editado por F. Bové y L. Heller, pp. 15-24. Arizona State University, Tempe.

Coe, Michael D., 1961, La Victoria, an Early Site on the Pacific Coast of Guatemala. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnohistory, Vol. 53. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.

Coe, Michael D. y Richard Diehl, 1980, In the Land of the Olmec. University of Texas Press, Austin.

Coe, Michael D. y Kent V. Flannery, 1964, “Microenvironments and Mesoamerican Prehistory”. Science, núm. 143, pp. 65-654.

Coe, Michael D. y Kent V. Flannery, 1967, Early Cultures and Human Ecology in South Coastal Guatemala. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology, Vol. 3. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C.

De la Fuente, Beatriz, 1994, “Arte monumental olmeca”. En Los olmecas en Mesoamérica, editado por J. Clark, pp. 203-222. El Equilibrista, México, y Turner Libros, Madrid.

Drucker, Philip, 1948, “Preliminary Notes on an Archaeological Survey of the Chiapas Coast”. Middle American Research Records, núm. 1, pp. 151-169.

Ekholm, Susanna, 1973, The Olmec Rock Carving at Xoc, Chiapas, Mexico. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 32. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Ekholm, Susanna, 1989, “Las figurillas preclásicas cerámicas de Izapa, Chiapas: tradición Mixe-Zoque”. En El Preclásico o Formativo: avances y perspectivas, compilado por M. Carmona Macías, pp. 333352. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, México.

Feddema, Victoria, 1993, “Early Formative Subsistence and Agriculture in Southeastern Mesoamerica”. Tesis de maestría, Departamento de Antropología y Sociología, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.

Flannery, Kent V. (editor), 1986, Guilá Naquitz: Archaic Foraging and Early Agriculture in Oaxaca, Mexico. Academic Press, Nueva York.

Flannery, Kent V. y Michael D. Coe, 1968, “Social and Economic Systems in Formative Mesoamerica”. En New Perspectives in Archaeology, editado por S. Binford y L. Binford, pp. 267-283. Aldine, Chicago.

Gosser, Dennis, 1994, The Role of Ceramic Technology during the late Barra and early Locona Phases at Mound 5, Paso de la Amada, Chiapas, Mexico. Tesis de licenciatura, Departamento de Antropología, Brigham Young University, Provo.

Green, Dee y Gareth W. Lowe, 1967, Altamira and Padre Piedra, Early Preclassic Sites in Chiapas, Mexico. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 20. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Hayden, Brian y Rob Gargett, 1990, “Big Man, Big Heart? A Mesoamerican View of the Emergence of Complex Society”. Ancient Mesoamerica, núm. 1, pp. 3-20.

Hill, Warren y John E. Clark, 2001, “Sports, Gambling, and Government: America’s First Social Conquest?”. American Anthropologist, núm. 103, pp. 331-345.

Jackson, Thomas L. y Michael W. Love, 1991, “Blade Running: Middle Preclassic Obsidian Exchange and the Introduction of Prismatic Blades at La Blanca, Guatemala”. Ancient Mesoamerica, núm. 2, pp. 47-59.

Kennett, Douglas y Barbara Voorhies, 1995, “Middle Holocene Periodicities in Rainfall Inferred from Oxygen and Carbon Isotopic Fluctuations in Prehistoric Tropical Estuarine Mollusc Shells”. Archaeometry, núm. 37, pp. 157-170.

Lesure, Richard, 1993, “Salvamento arqueológico en El Varal: una perspectiva sobre la organización sociopolítica olmeca de la costa Chiapas”. En Segundo y Tercer Foro de Arqueología de Chiapas, compilado por M. Pedrero Corzo, pp. 211-227. Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas.

Lesure, Richard, 1997, “Figurines and Social Identities in Early Sedentary Societies of Coastal Chiapas, Mexico, 1550-800 b.c.”. En Women in Prehistory: North America and Mesoamerica, editado por C. Claassen y R. A. Joyce, pp. 227-248. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Lesure, Richard, 1999, “Figurines as Representations and Products at Paso de la Amada, Mexico”. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, núm. 9, pp. 209-220.

Lesure, Richard, 2000, “Animal Imagery, Cultural Unities, and Ideologies of Inequality in Early Formative Mesoamerica”. En Olmec Art and Archaeology in Mesoamerica, editado por J. Clark y M. Pye, pp. 193-215. Studies in the History of Art, núm. 58. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C.

Lesure, Richard y Michael Blake, 2002, “Interpretive Challenges in the Study of Early Complexity: Economy, Ritual, and Architecture at Paso de la Amada, Mexico”. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, núm. 21, pp. 1-24.

Lewenstein, Suzanne y Jeffrey Walker, 1984, “The Obsidian Chip/Manioc Grating Hypothesis and the Mesoamerican Preclassic”. Journal of New World Archaeology, núm.6, pp. 25-38.

Lorenzo, José Luis, 1955, “Los concheros de la costa de Chiapas”. Anales del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, núm. 7, pp. 41-50.

Love, Michael W., 2002, Early Complex Society in Pacific Guatemala: Settlements and Chronology of the Río Naranjo, Guatemala. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 66. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Lowe, Gareth W., 1967, “Discussion”. En Altamira and Padre Piedra, Early Preclassic Sites in Chiapas, Mexico, by Dee Green y Gareth Lowe, pp. 53-79. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 20. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Lowe, Gareth W., 1971, “Civilizational Consequences of Varying Degrees of Agricultural and Ceramic Dependency within the Basic Ecosystems of Mesoamerica”. Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility, núm. 11, pp. 212-248.

Lowe, Gareth W., 1975, The Early Preclassic Barra Phase of Altamira, Chiapas. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 38. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Lowe, Gareth W., 1977, “The Mixe-Zoque as Competing Neighbors of the Early Lowland Maya”. En The Origins of Maya Civilization, editado por R. E. W. Adams, pp. 197-284. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.

MacNeish, Richard S., 1966, “Speculations about the beginnings of village agriculture in MesoAmerica”. XXXVI Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, Actas y Memorias, Vol. 1, pp. 181-185. Sevilla.

MacNeish, Richard S., 1981, “Tehuacan’s Accomplishments”. En Handbook of Middle American Indians, Supplement 1, editado por V. Bricker, pp. 31-47. University of Texas Press, Austin.

Marcus, Joyce y Kent V. Flannery, 1996, Zapotec Civilization: How Urban Society Evolved in Mexico’s Oaxaca Valley. Thames and Hudson, London.

Navarrete, Carlos, 1974, The Olmec Rock Carvings at Pijijiapan, Chiapas, Mexico and Other Olmec Pieces from Chiapas and Mexico. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 35. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Navarrete, Carlos, 1978, “The Prehispanic System of Communications between Chiapas and Tabasco”. En Mesoamerican Communication Routes and Cultural Contacts, editado por T. Lee, Jr. y C. Navarrete, pp. 75-106. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 40. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Nelson, Fred W. y Barbara Voorhies, 1980, “Trace Element Analysis of Obsidian Artifacts from Three Shell Midden Sites in the Littoral Zone, Chiapas, Mexico”. American Antiquity, núm. 45, pp. 540-548.

Ortiz, Ponciano y María del Carmen Rodríguez, 1994, “Los espacios sagrados olmecas: El Manatí, un caso especial”. En Los olmecas en Mesoamérica, editado por J. Clark, pp. 69-91. El Equilibrista, México, y Turner Libros, Madrid.

Pérez Suárez, Tomás, 2002, “Cantón Corralito: un sitio olmeca en el litoral chiapaneco”. En Arqueología mexicana, historia y esencia. Siglo XX, editado por J. Nava Rivero, pp. 71-92. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, México.

Sanders, William, 1956, “The Central Mexican Symbiotic Region: A Study in Prehistoric Settlement Patterns”. En Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in the New World, editado por G. Willey, Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Nueva York.

Sanders, William y Barbara Price, 1968, Mesoamerica: The Evolution of a Civilization. Random House, Nueva York.

Schele, Linda y J. H. Miller, 1983, The Mirror, the Rabbit, and the Bundle: “Accessions” Expressions from the Classic Maya Inscriptions. Studies Pre-Columbian Art, núm. 25. Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D. C.

Voorhies, Barbara, 1976, The Chantuto People: An Archaic Period Society of the Chiapas Littoral, Mexico. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, núm. 41. Brigham Young University, Provo.

Voorhies, Barbara, 1996, “The Transformation from Foraging to Farming in Lowland Mesoamerica”. En The Managed Mosaic: Ancient Maya Agriculture and Resource Use, editado por Scott Fedick, pp. 17-28. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City Press.

Voorhies, Barbara, Douglas J. Kennett, John G. Jones y Thomas A. Wake, 2002, “A Middle Archaic Archaeological Site on the West Coast of Mexico”. Latin American Antiquity, núm. 13, pp. 179-200.

Voorhies, Barbara, George H. Michaels y George M. Riser, 1991, “An Ancient Shrimp Fishery in South Coastal Mexico”. National Geographic Research and Exploration, núm. 7, pp. 20-35.

Artículos similares

También puede {advancedSearchLink} para este artículo.