Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Ceramic exchange networks in the south‐central Tuxtla Mountains, southern Veracruz, Mexico
View through CrossRef
AbstractOur study situates the classic period center Matacanela, located in southern Veracruz, Mexico, within the context of shifting regional political‐economic systems. Specifically, we assess the potential for utilizing neutron activation analysis (NAA) of pottery in the study of changing interactions through a focus on three ceramic wares: Coarse Orange, Fine Orange, and Coarse Brown. NAA identified four compositional groups, suggesting that Matacanela selectively utilized ceramics from a variety of sources, but the center's inhabitants overwhelming used ceramics that were only occasionally exploited by their contemporaries in the nearby Catemaco and Tepango valleys. Instead, the center's primary ceramic exchange partners were in the southern Tuxtlas foothills. This divergent pattern of ceramic exchange parallels earlier obsidian exploitation differences that revealed participation in the networks of the western Tuxtla uplands as well as the southern foothills and centers within eastern Olman. The findings of this study contribute to (1) the geological characterization of ceramic resources used by ancient Gulf lowland societies, (2) to the comparative ceramic database in a region that was an important nexus for diverse cultural traditions spanning Mesoamerican prehistory, and (3) the refinement of our knowledge relevant to the divergent strategies employed by groups.
Title: Ceramic exchange networks in the south‐central Tuxtla Mountains, southern Veracruz, Mexico
Description:
AbstractOur study situates the classic period center Matacanela, located in southern Veracruz, Mexico, within the context of shifting regional political‐economic systems.
Specifically, we assess the potential for utilizing neutron activation analysis (NAA) of pottery in the study of changing interactions through a focus on three ceramic wares: Coarse Orange, Fine Orange, and Coarse Brown.
NAA identified four compositional groups, suggesting that Matacanela selectively utilized ceramics from a variety of sources, but the center's inhabitants overwhelming used ceramics that were only occasionally exploited by their contemporaries in the nearby Catemaco and Tepango valleys.
Instead, the center's primary ceramic exchange partners were in the southern Tuxtlas foothills.
This divergent pattern of ceramic exchange parallels earlier obsidian exploitation differences that revealed participation in the networks of the western Tuxtla uplands as well as the southern foothills and centers within eastern Olman.
The findings of this study contribute to (1) the geological characterization of ceramic resources used by ancient Gulf lowland societies, (2) to the comparative ceramic database in a region that was an important nexus for diverse cultural traditions spanning Mesoamerican prehistory, and (3) the refinement of our knowledge relevant to the divergent strategies employed by groups.
Related Results
Geology of the Florida Mountains, southwestern New Mexico
Geology of the Florida Mountains, southwestern New Mexico
The Florida Mountains are an eastward-tilted Basin and Range fault block approximately 24 km (15 mi) southeast of Deming. The mountains are surrounded by a broad bajada that slopes...
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
When characters in the Fox Television sitcom The Mindy Project call Mindy Lahiri fat, Mindy sees it as a case of misidentification. She reminds the character that she is a “petite ...
Pennsylvanian Rocks of Southwestern New Mexico and Southeastern Arizona
Pennsylvanian Rocks of Southwestern New Mexico and Southeastern Arizona
Abstract
Pennsylvanian strata in southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona range from Morrowan? to Virgilian in age, are disconformable to angularly unconform...
PRE-HISPANIC OBSIDIAN PROCUREMENT IN THE TUXTLA MOUNTAINS,
SOUTHERN VERACRUZ, MEXICO
PRE-HISPANIC OBSIDIAN PROCUREMENT IN THE TUXTLA MOUNTAINS,
SOUTHERN VERACRUZ, MEXICO
This paper discusses the results of recent instrumental
neutron-activation analysis (INNA) work identifying the obsidian
sources relied upon in the Tuxtla Mountains of southern V...
Part I: The Wolfcampian Joyita uplift in central New Mexico: Part II: Fusulinids of the Joyita Hills, Socorro County, central New Mexico
Part I: The Wolfcampian Joyita uplift in central New Mexico: Part II: Fusulinids of the Joyita Hills, Socorro County, central New Mexico
Part I: The Joyita uplift is a documented key to the central New Mexico late Virgilian and early Wolfcampian episode of erosion and accompanying deposition of clastic strata. Detai...
The investment attributes of Mexico REITs as a listed property investment vehicle
The investment attributes of Mexico REITs as a listed property investment vehicle
PurposeMexico REITs are a significant and important REIT market, both in a regional and in emerging property market context. As one of the few emerging economies in the world with ...
Roles of Mountains in Dust Storms 
Roles of Mountains in Dust Storms 
A study of the dust emission, transport, and deposition is very important for understanding of the various health and social impacts on the local human population, biogeochemical c...
EARLY FORMATIVE ANTHROPOMORPHIC FIGURINES FROM LA JOYA, SOUTHERN VERACRUZ, MEXICO
EARLY FORMATIVE ANTHROPOMORPHIC FIGURINES FROM LA JOYA, SOUTHERN VERACRUZ, MEXICO
AbstractThis paper describes Early Formative (3250–2700 b.p., uncalibrated) anthropomorphic figurines from the site of La Joya, located in the Tuxtla Mountains of southern Veracruz...

