3.9 Article

Zooarchaeology of flight: Avifauna resource from the Southern Argentine Puna

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE-REPORTS
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 516-534

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2017.12.046

Keywords

Zooarchaeology; Birds; Feathers and bones; Argentine Puna

Categories

Funding

  1. [FONCyT-PICT 1160]
  2. [CIUNT G26-404]
  3. [PIP-CONICET 6398]

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Birds remains recovered from archaeological contexts may or may not to be the product of human activities. No matter how they reached the site, such record provides valuable information. If bird remains are product of human activities, provide information such as diet and economic, symbolic and/or ideological activities. If this record is result of a non-human process, provides also useful data such environmental conditions or seasonal abandonment of sites. On the basis of the analysis of bird remains -feathers and bones-we explore here the use of the avifaunal resource in hunter-gatherer (ca. 8480 BP), agro-pastoral (ca. 1270-220 BP) and Historical Period contexts, from a high altitude desert in the southern Puna region of Argentina. Bird remains were recovered from open-air and overhang archaeological sites. An important aspect of the zooarchaeological record is the poor representation of bird bones in relation to feathers for both types of sites. The different human groups that inhabited this area of the Puna over time used feathers (Anatidae, Phoenicopteridae, Strigidae, Passeriformes and Rheidae), for paraphernalia and manufacturing weapons. Some passerines feathers, pellets and dung of carnivores containing feathers are linked with moments of site abandonment. Birds were a reliable resource in this high desert from Archaic through Colonial times.

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