4.8 Article

Early maize agriculture and interzonal interaction in southern Peru

Journal

NATURE
Volume 440, Issue 7080, Pages 76-79

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature04294

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Over the past decade, increasing attention to the recovery and identification of plant microfossil remains from archaeological sites located in lowland South America has significantly increased knowledge of pre-Columbian plant domestication and crop plant dispersals in tropical forests and other regions(1-4). Along the Andean mountain chain, however, the chronology and trajectory of plant domestication are still poorly understood for both important indigenous staple crops such as the potato ( Solanum sp.) and others exogenous to the region, for example, maize (Zea mays)(5,6). Here we report the analyses of plant microremains from a late preceramic house (3,431 +/- 45 to 3,745 +/- 65 C-14 BP or similar to 3,600 to 4,000 calibrated years BP) in the highland southern Peruvian site of Waynuna. Our results extend the record of maize by at least a millennium in the southern Andes, show on-site processing of maize into flour, provide direct evidence for the deliberate movement of plant foods by humans from the tropical forest to the highlands, and confirm the potential of plant microfossil analysis in understanding ancient plant use and migration in this region.

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