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Archaic period in Mesoamerica

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565:: Tehuacán Valley is located southeast of the Valley of Mexico and has been occupied over 10,000 years. The area was primarily surveyed and excavated by Robert MacNeish and his colleagues in the 1960s. While discoveries in the valley have been fundamental to the study of the Mesoamerican Archaic period, the radiocarbon dates are very controversial. Because archaeologists are skeptical of the accuracy of the radiocarbon dates and the integrity of stratigraphic levels, data and artifacts found in Tehuacán have been re-examined and re-analyzed many times. Within the valley, one major site is 385:. Along the Chiapas coast, charcoal levels increased after 3500 BCE and remained high until 2600 BCE when people began abandoning coastal sites, which has been connected with forest clearing through burning. Across Northern Belize, paleoecological evidence indicates people began cultivating maize and manioc before 3000 BCE, but widespread forest clearance and increased maize cultivation began only after 2400 BCE. Later in the Archaic period and into the Preclassic, Mesoamerican peoples began adapting different agricultural methods, such as 591:: Gheo-Shih is a large (1.5 hectare) open air site on the Mitla River floodplains below the Guilá Naquitz site. The site was occupied in the Middle Archaic from around 5000 to 4000 BCE. The site is known for a wide variety of stone artifacts including ground-stone tools, projectile points, butchering tools, and drilled stone pendants. There are also circular rock features that some have suggested may have been houses and two parallel lines of stones thought to have been a dance ground, ball court, or road. 658:, and Freshwater Creek, are located within the Northern Belize Chert-Bearing Zone and are important sites for chert starting in the Archaic period and continuing into the Preclassic and Classic period. The first permanent settlements at Colha begin around 3000 BCE and Colha remains settled in later periods. As a result, Colha has one of the best defined Late Archaic sequences and is useful in tracking changes from the Archaic period into the Preclassic. 585:: Guilá Naquitz is a rock shelter located on the northern flanks of the valley and is the earliest of the sites. The site was excavated in 1966 and is the best documented site in the valley. It was temporarily occupied six times in the Early Archaic between 8000 and 6500 BCE. It contained 1716 pieces of chipped stone as well as some of the earliest known remains of domesticated maize, squash, and bottle gourd. 48: 476:) also appears to have been domesticated around this time in the same area based on dated remains at the same site. Bottle gourd, however, was not a food source, but rather was used predominantly as a container. Stone tools from the Archaic period found in excavations around Freshwater Creek in Northern Belize were found to have remains of different varieties of maize, squash, beans, 541:. Christine Niederberger suggests that sedentary peoples in the Basin of Mexico traded to obtain foreign green obsidian, rather than traveling to gather it directly from the source. In addition, Colha chert has been found outside of the Colha region, suggesting that trade networks may have developed around Colha chert. 640:: Cerro de las Conchas is the earliest of the Chiapas shell mounds, dating between 5500 and 3500 BCE. It is 3.5 m high and 100 m in diameter and located at the edge of the El Hueyate mangrove estuary. It was periodically occupied as a location to collect and process marine resources, especially clams and shrimp. 296:
sea resource collection and processing site. While it seems Cerro de las Conchas was only occupied seasonally, it seems likely that inland base camps were occupied year-round. More permanent sites are identified in the archaeological record with greater frequency dating to 3000 BCE and later. The site of
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El Gigante rock shelter: El Gigante rock shelter is in the southern highlands of Honduras with excellent organic preservation. It was occupied seasonally and has storage pits. It was excavated in 2000 and 2001 and contains remains of wild plants and animals, as well as domesticated squash, though not
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Zohalpico: Zohalpico is a site at the edge of Lake Chalco in the Valley of Mexico. The site was excavated by Christine Niederberger in the 1960s and 1970s. Inhabitants of the site lived there year-round and used wild plants and animals, as well as domesticated maize and amaranth. The site was covered
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in these areas are highly visible, which likely aided in their identification by scholars. The earliest known coastal shell mound is Cerro de las Conchas, which dates between 5500 and 3500 BCE. Based on the limited diversity in artifacts and faunal remains, Cerro de las Conchas appears to have been a
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It is generally unclear when the Archaic period ends and the Preclassic begins. There is no clear distinction between the food ways and tools of the Late Archaic and Early Preclassic. Based on the appearance of Maya ceramics at important Preclassic sites, the transition occurred roughly between 1200
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by 1500 BCE. Based on these findings, it appears that people settled in resource-rich areas, such as along the coasts or by lakes, earlier than in semi-arid and arid environments like the Valleys of Oaxaca and Tehuacán. As agriculture developed, the population increased and settlements expanded into
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languages split around 2200 BCE in the highlands and splinter groups appear in the lowlands around 1400 BCE. Others suggest, based on continuity in food ways and stone tool technologies, that Archaic populations in the lowlands developed or learned ceramic technologies and became the earliest Maya.
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worked from local chert. Constricted adzes were general-purpose tools used for woodcutting and digging, likely to clear forests and cultivate crops. Lowe and Sawmill points are other bifacially flaked stone tools found throughout Mesoamerica. These points were likely used in spears or harpoons to
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and beginnings of domestication were likely versions of "dooryard horticulture" in which Archaic peoples used small plots nearby residential locations to plant and nurture a variety of plant species. As agriculture intensified and domesticated crops grew in importance, Archaic peoples began using
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Tlacuachero shell mound: Tlacuachero is also a shell mound that was seasonally occupied to gather and process marine resources, such as clams, fish, and turtles. 57 obsidian flakes have been found that seem to originate from highland Guatemala, suggesting there may have been trade networks. Two
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networks throughout Mesoamerica. Little is known about trade in the Archaic period, but some evidence suggests the existence of local trade networks and some possible long-distance trade. Barbara Voorhies and her colleagues have argued that coastal Chantuto peoples in Southern Mexico traded for
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when precipitation increased and the environment stabilized in the Holocene. The resources available to nomadic hunter-gatherers were likely changed by the change in climate, which drove peoples to adapt new means of acquiring food. While the change in climate was a catalyst for changes in food
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Mesoamerica is one of the world's centers for the independent domestication of plants. As people became more sedentary, they became more reliant on particular plants. Specialized and intensive foraging techniques, such as selectively collecting larger seeds to plant and store, were part of the
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as the wild ancestor of maize. In addition, molecular evidence indicates that maize was domesticated once in the Balsas region, then spread to other nearby regions. Some of the earliest identified maize appears in Highland Mexico. Two maize cobs from the Guilá Naquitz rock shelter have been
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Another issue is whether the Archaic peoples in the Maya region were the same people as in the Preclassic. There is little consensus on the nature, identity, or origins of the earliest Maya, which is complicated by disagreement about what constitutes Maya culture. Based on similarities in
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Like maize, squash also was domesticated once then spread through trade, but other crops appear to have been domesticated multiple times by different groups of Mesoamerican peoples. Squash (Cucurbita pepo) was domesticated by 8000 BCE based on dated squash remains found in Guilá Naquitz.
256:'s gulf coast, central highlands, and coasts, it seems that people began settling in constructed, permanent villages between 3000 and 1800 BCE. These early villages are associated with the construction of perishable structures, use of agriculture, and participation in trade, especially 499:, also known as Colha chert, is incredibly high quality and distinct from chert originating in other regions. Colha chert became a common and important material for stone tools beginning around 3000 BCE and continuing into the Preclassic and Classic periods. Within Colha, 455:
to 4300 BCE. Maize appears along the Chiapas coast by 3000 BCE, likely spread by trade. Based on the presence of maize pollen in swamps surrounding Colha around 3000 BCE, maize had also spread to Northern Belize by that time. Maize is also identified in the
575:: Similar to the nearby Tehuacán Valley, the Valley of Oaxaca has been inhabited for over 10000 years. Archaeologists Kent Flannery and Joyce Marcus have conducted and overseen much of the work in this area. Within the valley, there are four major sites: 569:. Coxcatlan Cave contained 15 out of 33 Archaic period components found in MacNeish's survey, as well as 75% of the stone tools. Small maize cobs and remains of squash, chili peppers, beans, and bottle gourd have also been found in the cave. 445:
One of the most important crops to be domesticated was maize. Maize was an important domesticate for Mesoamerican people because it was very productive, easy to store, and nutritional. Genetic and molecular research has identified
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Rosenswig, Robert, Deborah Pearsall, Marilyn Masson, Brendon Culleton, and Douglas Kennett. (2014). "Archaic Period Settlement and Subsistence in the Maya Lowlands: New Starch Grain and Lithic Data from Freshwater Creek, Belize."
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calendar to a date in the Archaic period (3114 BCE) similar to the date of the beginnings of horticulture and domestication in the lowlands, indicating that the Maya themselves may have traced their origins to the Archaic period.
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in ash during a volcanic eruption around 3000 BCE and was then reoccupied within the next century. After the volcanic eruption, the maize pollen density increased threefold and beans, gourds, and pumpkins appeared in the record.
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Most Archaic sites are not very well preserved or visible, which hampers archaeologists' ability to discover and study Archaic period sites. As a result, not many Archaic sites have been identified, although major sites like
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period. Scholars have found it difficult to determine exactly when the Paleoindian period ends and the Archaic begins, but it is generally linked with changing climate associated with the transition from the
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Santa Marta Cave: Santa Marta Cave is a site located in the Chiapas highlands in Mexico. The site was excavated by Richard MacNeish and Fredrick Peterson in 1959 then again in the 1970s by the
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Chiapas coast: Six large shell mounds on the coastal plain are some of the earliest sites in the region. The area has been predominantly excavated and surveyed by Barbara Voorhies.
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is thought to be complex and multiple. Archaic peoples increased their use of domesticated plants, but still relied predominantly on foraging wild plants and hunting wild animals.
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technologies, materials, and uses adapted and diversified during the Archaic period, especially in the Northern Belize Chert-Bearing Zone (NBCBZ) around the site of Colha. NBCNZ
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genus). Cultivation of domesticated plants resulted in an increased and more reliable food supply for Archaic peoples, allowing an increase in population and settlements.
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coasts. It is likely that the abundant sea and lagoon resources could easily support long-term, year-round settlements, leading people to settle first in these areas.
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and Caribbean coast of Mexico. Similar evidence of widespread forest clearing is seen starting around 5200 BCE on the Gulf coast and starting around 3500 BCE in the
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that was occupied at least six times between 8000 and 6500 BCE by a largely nomadic band. Another rock shelter, El Gigante rock shelter in the Southern Highlands of
159: 612:. The site was occupied by hunter-gatherers until 3500 then abandoned until it is occupied again by farming peoples around 1300 BCE. The site contains teosinte and 520:. Nearly all stone working techniques practiced in later periods are present and widespread in the Archaic period. Plant starch grains found on chipped-stone and 179:
that begins around 8000 BCE and ends around 2000 BCE and is generally divided into Early, Middle, and Late Archaic periods. The period is preceded by the
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in stone tool production. Constricted adzes in the same style as those from Colha have been found throughout the region. These tools are predominantly
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in Western Belize. The site was occupied from around 2400 to 1210 BCE. Constricted adzes and evidence of maize and cotton production have been found.
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levels, and increased maize pollen levels, indicates that maize and other crops were grown by slash-and-burn agriculture as early as 7300 BCE in the
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domestication process. Archaic peoples selected plants that could be easily stored and had a genetic makeup they could easily manipulate, such as
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trade. This change was gradual and differed by region. The earliest examples of this change are in temporary, seasonal shelters, such as
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Many important Archaic sites are located within Highland Mexico, likely due to the early extensive research into the Archaic period by
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obsidian. In the Tlacuachero shell mound on the Chiapas coast, 57 obsidian flakes were discovered that seem to originate from highland
1501: 333:, rainfall, and terrain, it likely took thousands of years for people to adapt agricultural methods in Mesoamerica. This change in 316:, was occupied as early as 2400 to 2130 BCE. Permanent villages are seen even later in the Valley of Oaxaca by 2000 BCE and in the 145: 1506: 358:(also known as swidden) agriculture to clear large areas of land further from residential areas. Recovered stone tools, such as 180: 672:. The site dates between 6990 and 6610 BCE. Archaeologists have discovered 251 chipped-stone artifacts, as well as hand and 211:
of the Paleoindian period and the proliferation of agricultural villages in the Preclassic. This period is known for the
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Arnold, Philip J. III. (2012) "The Development of Complex Societies in Formative-Period Pacific Guatemala and Chiapas."
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Increased reliance on domesticated plants and agriculture was gradual. Due to the diverse conditions, such as different
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in the Basin of Mexico has evidence of year-round settlement before a volcanic eruption around 3000 BCE. The site of
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hunt and fish or used as hafted knives. These stone tools were finely flaked using a variety of techniques, such as
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Rosenswig, Robert. (2015). "A Mosaic of Adaption: The Archaeological Record for Mesoamerica's Archaic Period."
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stone tools indicate the use of tools in processing plants, specifically in cutting and grinding plants.
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have discovered special-purpose workshops to manufacture constricted adzes, indicating the beginnings of
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suggested that the lowlands were populated by proto-Mayan speaking people from the highlands because
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Piperno, Dolores R. and Bruce D. Smith. (2012). "The Origins of Food Production in Mesoamerica."
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Joyce, Rosemary and John Henderson. (2001). "Beginnings of Village Life in Eastern Mesoamerica."
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inclusions, and vessel forms, it was previously thought that the Maya lowlands were occupied by
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Xihuatoxtla rock shelter: Xihuatoctla rock shelter is located on a tributary of the central
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from July to September, then in the Archaic period, around 4700 BCE, from May to October.
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Maya origin narratives from the Classic period describe fixing the beginning date of the
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The Archaic period is traditionally viewed as a long, transitional interval between the
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in northern Guatemala by 2600 BCE and at Actun Halal in Central Belize by 2210 BCE.
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of major Mesoamerican crops, the development of agriculture, and the beginning of
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Kennett, Douglas. (2012). "Archaic-Period Foragers and Farmers in Mesoamerica."
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Some of the earliest known villages appear along sea coasts, specifically the
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During the Archaic period, Mesoamerican peoples slowly changed from being
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have been explored by archaeologists. Most known Archaic sites are in the
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The Archaic period, also known as the preceramic period, is a period in
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production, factors leading people to domesticate plants and develop
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or along the coasts, though there are sites throughout the region.
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Lohse, Jon C. (2010). "Archaic Origins of the Lowland Maya."
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Actun Halal: Actun Halal is a 30 m long rock shelter in the
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Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History
397:, and using slash-and-burn methods less exclusively. 694:styles, such as double-line breaks, similar slips, 1488: 680: 248:hunter-gatherers to semi-sedentary or sedentary 1431:The Oxford Handbook of Mesoamerican Archaeology 1402:The Oxford Handbook of Mesoamerican Archaeology 1373:The Oxford Handbook of Mesoamerican Archaeology 132:List of archaeological periods (North America) 532:Stone tools have been used to track possible 324: 153: 308:and nearby swamps, such as Cobweb Swamp and 252:and farmers. Based on research at sites on 160: 146: 321:more marginal, less resource-rich areas. 1473:Sharer, Robert and Loa Traxler. (2006). 644:burials have been excavated at the site. 183:(or Lithic) period and followed by the 14: 1489: 1346: 1344: 1307: 1305: 1268: 1266: 1264: 1262: 1252: 1250: 1248: 1246: 1236: 1234: 1232: 1230: 1220: 1218: 1216: 1214: 1204: 1202: 1200: 1198: 1196: 1194: 1192: 1190: 1188: 1178: 1176: 1166: 1164: 1162: 1160: 1150: 1148: 1146: 1127: 1125: 1115: 1113: 1111: 1101: 1099: 1097: 1095: 1085: 1083: 1081: 1062: 1060: 1058: 1039: 1037: 1035: 1033: 1023: 1021: 1019: 1017: 1007: 1005: 995: 993: 991: 989: 987: 985: 983: 981: 971: 969: 967: 965: 963: 961: 959: 949: 947: 945: 943: 941: 931: 929: 927: 925: 923: 921: 919: 909: 907: 905: 903: 901: 899: 889: 887: 885: 883: 881: 616:pollen, as well as ground-stone tools. 1497:History of Central America by period 862: 860: 858: 848: 846: 844: 842: 840: 838: 828: 826: 824: 805: 803: 801: 799: 797: 795: 785: 783: 781: 779: 777: 767: 765: 755: 753: 743: 741: 739: 737: 735: 733: 686:and 800 BCE and differed by region. 1353: 1341: 1332: 1323: 1314: 1302: 1293: 1284: 1275: 1259: 1243: 1227: 1211: 1185: 1173: 1157: 1143: 1134: 1122: 1108: 1092: 1078: 1069: 1055: 1046: 1030: 1014: 1002: 978: 956: 938: 916: 896: 878: 702:speaking people migrating from the 24: 1446:Journal of Archaeological Research 869: 544: 239: 25: 1518: 1461:Journal of Archaeological Science 855: 835: 821: 812: 792: 774: 762: 750: 730: 27:Prehistoric period in Mesoamerica 1105:Sharer and Traxler 2006, p. 159. 1043:Sharer and Traxler 2006, p. 155. 999:Sharer and Traxler 2006, p. 158. 852:Sharer and Traxler 2006, p. 154. 809:Sharer and Traxler 2006, p. 157. 400: 46: 1502:Archaic period in North America 866:Joyce and Henderson 2001, p. 5. 759:Sharer and Traxler 2006, p. 98. 1507:Archaic period in the Americas 1182:Rosenswig et al. 2014, p. 320. 1170:Piperno and Smith 2012, p. 12. 1140:Rosenswig et al. 2014, p. 310. 1089:Piperno and Smith 2012, p. 10. 487: 13: 1: 1366: 1131:Piperno and Smith 2012, p. 2. 818:Rosenswig et al. 2014, p. 308 681:Connection to Maya Preclassic 18:Archaic Period in Mesoamerica 549: 514:hard and soft hammer flaking 369:evidence, such as increased 7: 1433:: Oxford University Press. 1404:: Oxford University Press. 1375:: Oxford University Press. 624: 558:in the Valley of Tehuacán. 201:extinct Pleistocene animals 10: 1523: 325:Development of agriculture 1469:10.1016/j.jas.2013.07.034 1454:10.1007/s10814-014-9080-x 594:The MartĂ­nez Rock shelter 1417:Latin American Antiquity 1388:Latin American Antiquity 723: 527: 79:8000 BCE– 2000 BCE 1320:Rosenswig 2015, p. 122. 1311:Rosenswig 2015, p. 129. 1299:Rosenswig 2015, p. 126. 1290:Rosenswig 2015, p. 124. 1281:Rosenswig 2015, p. 123. 1272:Rosenswig 2015, p. 132. 1052:Rosenswig 2015, p. 119. 1027:Rosenswig 2015, p. 128. 975:Rosenswig 2015, p. 127. 935:Rosenswig 2015, p. 131. 913:Rosenswig 2015, p. 125. 875:Rosenswig 2015, p. 118. 771:Rosenswig 2015, p. 120. 516:, direct pressure, and 505:economic specialization 373:levels, decreased tree 704:Isthmus of Tehuantepec 349:The earliest forms of 234:Mesoamerican highlands 221: 89:2000 BCE– 250 CE 379:Central Balsas region 264:. Guilá Naquitz is a 205: 638:Cerro de las Conchas 99:250 CE– 900 CE 40:Mesoamerican history 1448:, 23 (2), 115–162. 1419:, 21 (3), 312–352. 1359:Lohse 2010, p. 345. 1350:Lohse 2010, p. 317. 1329:Lohse 2010, p. 330. 1256:Lohse 2010, p. 325. 1240:Kennett 2012, p. 5. 1224:Lohse 2010, p. 328. 1208:Lohse 2010, p. 327. 1154:Lohse 2010, p. 318. 1119:Lohse 2010, p. 320. 1075:Lohse 2010, p. 324. 1066:Kennett 2012, p. 3. 1011:Lohse 2010, p. 339. 953:Kennett 2012, p. 6. 893:Kennett 2012, p. 4. 832:Kennett 2012, p. 2. 747:Kennett 2012, p. 1. 518:indirect percussion 474:Lagenaria siceraria 1338:Arnold 2012, p. 3. 789:Arnold 2012, p. 2. 663:Macal River Valley 318:Valley of Tehuacán 105:Postclassic period 656:Pulltrouser Swamp 482:Manihot esculenta 453:radiocarbon dated 310:Pulltrouser Swamp 199:, and absence of 170: 169: 123: 122: 85:Preclassic period 16:(Redirected from 1514: 1475:The Ancient Maya 1390:, 12 (1), 5–23. 1360: 1357: 1351: 1348: 1339: 1336: 1330: 1327: 1321: 1318: 1312: 1309: 1300: 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399: 356:slash-and-burn 326: 323: 241: 238: 168: 167: 165: 164: 157: 150: 142: 139: 138: 135: 134: 124: 121: 120: 117: 111: 110: 109:900 CE–1500 CE 107: 101: 100: 97: 95:Classic period 91: 90: 87: 81: 80: 77: 75:Archaic period 71: 70: 67: 59: 56: 55: 52: 51: 43: 42: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1519: 1508: 1505: 1503: 1500: 1498: 1495: 1494: 1492: 1485: 1484: 1483:9780804748179 1480: 1476: 1471: 1470: 1466: 1462: 1456: 1455: 1451: 1447: 1442: 1440: 1439:9780195390933 1436: 1432: 1427: 1426: 1422: 1418: 1413: 1411: 1410:9780195390933 1407: 1403: 1398: 1397: 1393: 1389: 1384: 1382: 1381:9780195390933 1378: 1374: 1356: 1347: 1345: 1335: 1326: 1317: 1308: 1306: 1296: 1287: 1278: 1269: 1267: 1265: 1263: 1253: 1251: 1249: 1247: 1237: 1235: 1233: 1231: 1221: 1219: 1217: 1215: 1205: 1203: 1201: 1199: 1197: 1195: 1193: 1191: 1189: 1179: 1177: 1167: 1165: 1163: 1161: 1151: 1149: 1147: 1137: 1128: 1126: 1116: 1114: 1112: 1102: 1100: 1098: 1096: 1086: 1084: 1082: 1072: 1063: 1061: 1059: 1049: 1040: 1038: 1036: 1034: 1024: 1022: 1020: 1018: 1008: 1006: 996: 994: 992: 990: 988: 986: 984: 982: 972: 970: 968: 966: 964: 962: 960: 950: 948: 946: 944: 942: 932: 930: 928: 926: 924: 922: 920: 910: 908: 906: 904: 902: 900: 890: 888: 886: 884: 882: 872: 863: 861: 859: 849: 847: 845: 843: 841: 839: 829: 827: 825: 815: 806: 804: 802: 800: 798: 796: 786: 784: 782: 780: 778: 768: 766: 756: 754: 744: 742: 740: 738: 736: 734: 729: 721: 718: 713: 709: 705: 701: 697: 693: 687: 675: 671: 667: 664: 660: 657: 653: 650: 649: 642: 639: 636: 635: 634: 633: 629: 628: 618: 615: 611: 607: 603: 602: 596: 593: 590: 587: 584: 583:Guilá Naquitz 581: 580: 579: 578: 574: 571: 568: 564: 561: 560: 559: 557: 542: 540: 535: 525: 523: 519: 515: 510: 506: 502: 498: 494: 485: 483: 479: 475: 471: 465: 463: 459: 458:Mirador Basin 454: 449: 443: 441: 440: 435: 431: 427: 423: 422: 417: 416:chili peppers 413: 409: 401:Domestication 398: 396: 395:crop rotation 392: 391:raised fields 388: 384: 383:Maya Lowlands 380: 376: 372: 368: 364: 361: 360:chipped stone 357: 352: 347: 345: 340: 339:Younger Dryas 336: 332: 322: 319: 315: 311: 307: 303: 299: 294: 290: 286: 281: 279: 275: 271: 267: 263: 262:Guilá Naquitz 259: 255: 251: 247: 237: 235: 231: 227: 226:Guilá Naquitz 220: 218: 214: 213:domestication 210: 204: 202: 198: 195: 191: 186: 182: 178: 175: 163: 158: 156: 151: 149: 144: 143: 141: 140: 133: 130: 129: 127: 119:after 1500 CE 118: 116: 115:Columbian era 113: 112: 108: 106: 103: 102: 98: 96: 93: 92: 88: 86: 83: 82: 78: 76: 73: 72: 68: 66: 65:Lithic period 63: 62: 54: 53: 49: 45: 44: 41: 37: 34: 33: 30: 19: 1474: 1472: 1460: 1457: 1445: 1443: 1430: 1428: 1416: 1414: 1401: 1399: 1387: 1385: 1372: 1370: 1355: 1334: 1325: 1316: 1295: 1286: 1277: 1136: 1071: 1048: 871: 814: 688: 684: 670:Balsas River 597:Cueva Blanca 553: 531: 522:ground-stone 491: 481: 473: 470:Bottle gourd 466: 444: 438: 429: 420: 411: 404: 351:horticulture 348: 328: 293:Shell mounds 282: 266:rock shelter 243: 222: 206: 174:Mesoamerican 171: 125: 74: 29: 712:Proto-Mayan 488:Stone tools 344:agriculture 302:Lake Chalco 190:Pleistocene 181:Paleoindian 1491:Categories 1367:References 717:Long Count 700:Mixe-Zoque 509:bifacially 493:Stone tool 331:soil types 278:wet season 185:Preclassic 177:chronology 589:Gheo-shih 550:Highlands 539:Guatemala 439:Plaseolus 387:terracing 298:Zohapilco 289:Caribbean 217:sedentism 1425:25766996 625:Lowlands 448:teosinte 424:genus), 421:Capiscum 412:Zea mays 371:charcoal 335:foodways 274:Honduras 258:obsidian 250:foragers 194:Holocene 126:See also 692:pottery 460:nearby 432:), and 285:Chiapas 268:in the 246:nomadic 192:to the 36:Periods 1481:  1437:  1423:  1408:  1396:971754 1394:  1379:  696:temper 620:maize. 478:manioc 426:squash 393:, and 375:pollen 314:Belize 254:Mexico 197:epochs 57:  1421:JSTOR 1392:JSTOR 724:Notes 652:Colha 614:cacao 534:trade 528:Trade 497:chert 462:Nakbe 434:beans 408:maize 363:adzes 306:Colha 230:Colha 1479:ISBN 1435:ISBN 1406:ISBN 1377:ISBN 287:and 228:and 1465:doi 1450:doi 414:), 300:on 38:in 1493:: 1441:. 1412:. 1383:. 1343:^ 1304:^ 1261:^ 1245:^ 1229:^ 1213:^ 1187:^ 1175:^ 1159:^ 1145:^ 1124:^ 1110:^ 1094:^ 1080:^ 1057:^ 1032:^ 1016:^ 1004:^ 980:^ 958:^ 940:^ 918:^ 898:^ 880:^ 857:^ 837:^ 823:^ 794:^ 776:^ 764:^ 752:^ 732:^ 706:. 389:, 1467:: 1452:: 676:. 480:( 472:( 428:( 410:( 161:e 154:t 147:v 20:)

Index

Archaic Period in Mesoamerica
Periods
Mesoamerican history

Lithic period
Archaic period
Preclassic period
Classic period
Postclassic period
Columbian era
List of archaeological periods (North America)
v
t
e
Mesoamerican
chronology
Paleoindian
Preclassic
Pleistocene
Holocene
epochs
extinct Pleistocene animals
hunter-gatherers
domestication
sedentism
Guilá Naquitz
Colha
Mesoamerican highlands
nomadic
foragers

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