3.9 Article

Cultural filiations between the Viru communities, Early Intermediate Period, northern coast of Peru: Recent contributions from ceramic technology

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.103232

Keywords

Ceramic technology; Petrography; Operative chain concept; Technical tradition; Andean archaeology; Viru culture; Communities of potters

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Funding

  1. University Paris 1 - Pantheon Sorbonne
  2. French laboratory ArchAm [UMR8096]
  3. American Museum of Natural History of New York

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The Vira population is believed to have formed a centralized polity in the Vira Valley, with occasional settlements in neighboring regions. Their presence is identified by negative ceramic cultural markers. By using technological methods to reconstruct Vira ceramic production, it is possible to verify the hypothesis of Vira communities moving into adjacent valleys.
The Vira populations are now believed to have formed a centralized polity in the Vira Valley, which occasionally settled in neighboring regions, as in Pampa La Cruz in the Moche Valley, and Huaca Prieta in the Chicama Valley. Their presence is essentially established by their cultural marker: negative ceramic. However, little is known about the relations between these populations, and in particular about the technical traditions of potters, which would enable us to know if they belong to the same community of potters. We propose to test the hypothesis of a movement of Vira communities into adjacent valleys by a technological approach that seeks to reconstruct all the steps of the Vira ceramic production. The analysis of manufacturing traces combined with the petrographic study of pastes leads to the definition of a technical tradition shared and perpetuated by these communities, each producing its own pottery locally.

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