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Caral-Supe civilization

Caral-Supe (also known as Caral and Norte Chico) was a complex pre-Columbian-era society that included as many as thirty major population centers in what is now the Caral region of north-central coastal Peru. The civilization flourished between the fourth and second millennia BC, with the formation of the first city generally dated to around 3500 BC, at Huaricanga, in the Fortaleza area.[1] It is from 3100 BC onward that large-scale human settlement and communal construction become clearly apparent,[2] which lasted until a period of decline around 1800 BC.[3] Since the early twenty-first century, it has been established as the oldest-known civilization in the Americas, and as one of the six sites where civilisation separately originated in the ancient world.[4]

Caral-Supe
Map of Caral-Supe sites showing their locations in Peru
Alternative namesCaral, Norte Chico
Geographical rangeLima, Peru
PeriodCotton Pre-Ceramic
Datesc. 3,500 BCE – c. 1,800 BCE
Type siteAspero
Preceded byLauricocha
Followed byKotosh
Reconstruction of one of the pyramids of Aspero

This civilization flourished along three rivers, the Fortaleza, the Pativilca, and the Supe. These river valleys each have large clusters of sites. Farther south, there are several associated sites along the Huaura River.[5] The alternative name, Caral-Supe, is derived from the city of Caral[6] in the Supe Valley, a large and well-studied Caral-Supe site.

Complex society in Caral-Supe arose a millennium after Sumer in Mesopotamia, was contemporaneous with the Egyptian pyramids, and predated the Mesoamerican Olmec by nearly two millennia.

In archaeological nomenclature, Caral-Supe is a pre-ceramic culture of the pre-Columbian Late Archaic; it completely lacked ceramics and no evidence of visual art has survived. The most impressive achievement of the civilization was its monumental architecture, including large earthwork platform mounds and sunken circular plazas. Archaeological evidence suggests use of textile technology and, possibly, the worship of common deity symbols, both of which recur in pre-Columbian Andean cultures. Sophisticated government is presumed to have been required to manage the ancient Caral. Questions remain over its organization, particularly the influence of food resources on politics.

Archaeologists have been aware of ancient sites in the area since at least the 1940s; early work occurred at Aspero on the coast, a site identified as early as 1905,[7] and later at Caral, farther inland. In the late 1990s, Peruvian archaeologists, led by Ruth Shady, provided the first extensive documentation of the civilization with work at Caral.[8] A 2001 paper in Science, providing a survey of the Caral research,[9] and a 2004 article in Nature, describing fieldwork and radiocarbon dating across a wider area,[2] revealed Caral-Supe's full significance and led to widespread interest.[10]

History and geography edit

 
Remains of platform mound structures at Caral

The dating of the Caral-Supe sites has pushed back the estimated beginning date of complex societies in the Peruvian region by more than one thousand years. The Chavín culture, c. 900 BC, had previously been considered the first civilization of the area. Regularly, it still is cited incorrectly as such in general works.[11][12]

The discovery of Caral-Supe has also shifted the focus of research away from the highland areas of the Andes and lowlands adjacent to the mountains (where the Chavín, and later Inca, had their major centers) to the Peruvian littoral, or coastal regions. Caral is located in a north-central area of the coast, approximately 150 to 200 km north of Lima, roughly bounded by the Lurín Valley on the south and the Casma Valley on the north. It comprises four coastal valleys: the Huaura, Supe, Pativilca, and Fortaleza. Known sites are concentrated in the latter three, which share a common coastal plain. The three principal valleys cover only 1,800 km², and research has emphasized the density of the population centers.[13]

The Peruvian littoral appears an "improbable, even aberrant" candidate for the "pristine" development of civilization, compared to other world centers.[1] It is extremely arid, bounded by two rain shadows (caused by the Andes to the east, and the Pacific trade winds to the west). The region is punctuated by more than 50 rivers that carry Andean snowmelt. The development of widespread irrigation from these water sources is seen as decisive in the emergence of Caral-Supe;[3][14] since all of the monumental architecture at various sites has been found close to irrigation channels.[citation needed]

The radiocarbon work of Jonathan Haas et al., found that 10 of 95 samples taken in the Pativilca and Fortaleza areas dated from before 3500 BC. The oldest, dating from 9210 BC, provides "limited indication" of human settlement during the Pre-Columbian Early Archaic era. Two dates of 3700 BC are associated with communal architecture, but are likely to be anomalous. It is from 3200 BC onward that large-scale human settlement and communal construction are clearly apparent.[2] Mann, in a survey of the literature in 2005, suggests "sometime before 3200 BC, and possibly before 3500 BC" as the beginning date of the Caral-Supe formative period. He notes that the earliest date securely associated with a city is 3500 BC, at Huaricanga, in the Fortaleza area of the north, based on Haas's dates.[1]

Haas's early-third-millennium dates suggest that the development of coastal and inland sites occurred in parallel. But, from 2500 to 2000 BC, during the period of greatest expansion, the population and development decisively shifted toward the inland sites. All development apparently occurred at large interior sites such as Caral, although they remained dependent on fish and shellfish from the coast.[2] The peak in dates is in keeping with Shady's dates at Caral, which show habitation from 2627 BC to 2020 BC.[9] That coastal and inland sites developed in tandem remains disputed, however (see next section).[citation needed]

Influence edit

By around 2200 BC, the influence of Norte Chico civilization spread far along the coast. To the south, it went as far as the Chillon valley, and the site of El Paraiso. To the north, it spread as far as the Santa River valley.[15]

c. 1800 BC, the Caral-Supe civilization began to decline, with more powerful centers appearing to the south and north along the coast, and to the east inside the belt of the Andes. The success of irrigation-based agriculture at Caral-Supe may have contributed to its being eclipsed. Anthropologist Professor Winifred Creamer of Northern Illinois University notes that "when this civilization is in decline, we begin to find extensive canals farther north. People were moving to more fertile ground and taking their knowledge of irrigation with them".[3] It would be a thousand years before the rise of the next great Peruvian culture, the Chavín.[citation needed]

 
Caral panorama

Geographical links edit

Cultural links with the highland areas have been noted by archaeologists. Ruth Shady highlights the links with the Kotosh Religious Tradition:[16]

Numerous architectural features found among the settlements of Supe, including subterranean circular courts, stepped pyramids and sequential platforms, as well as material remains and their cultural implications, excavated at Aspero and the valley sites we are digging (Caral, Chupacigarro, Lurihuasi, Miraya), are shared with other settlements of the area that participated in what is known as the Kotosh Religious Tradition. Most specific among these features include rooms with benches and hearths with subterranean ventilation ducts, wall niches, biconvex beads, and musical flutes.[17][excessive quote]

Maritime coast and agricultural interior edit

Research into Caral-Supe continues, with many unsettled questions. Debate is ongoing regarding two related questions: the degree to which the flourishing of the Caral-Supe was based on maritime food resources, and the exact relationship this implies between the coastal and inland sites.[NB 1]

Confirmed diet edit

A broad outline of the Caral-Supe diet has been suggested. At Caral, the edible domesticated plants noted by Shady are squash, beans, lúcuma, guava, pacay (Inga feuilleei), and sweet potato.[9] Haas et al. noted the same foods in their survey farther north, while adding avocado and achira. In 2013, good evidence for maize also was documented by Haas et al. (see below).[18]

There was also a significant seafood component at both coastal and inland sites. Shady notes that "animal remains are almost exclusively marine" at Caral, including clams and mussels, and large amounts of anchovies and sardines.[9] That the anchovy fish reached inland is clear,[1] although Haas suggests that "shellfish [which would include clams and mussels], sea mammals, and seaweed do not appear to have been significant portions of the diet in the inland, non-maritime sites".[13]

Theory of a maritime foundation for Andean civilization edit

 
The people from the Caral-Supe civilization used vertebrae of the blue whale as stools

The role of seafood in the Caral-Supe diet has aroused debate. Much early fieldwork was conducted in the region of Aspero on the coast, before the full scope and inter-connectedness of the several sites of the civilization were realized. In a 1973 paper, Michael E. Moseley contended that a maritime subsistence (seafood) economy had been the basis of the society and its remarkably early flourishing,[7] a theory later elaborated as a "maritime foundation of Andean civilization" (MFAC).[19][20] He confirmed a previously observed lack of ceramics at Aspero, and he deduced that "hummocks" on the site constituted the remains of artificial platform mounds.[citation needed]

This thesis of a maritime foundation was contrary to the general scholarly consensus that the rise of civilization was based on intensive agriculture, particularly of at least one cereal. The production of agricultural surpluses had long been seen as essential in promoting population density and the emergence of complex society. Moseley's ideas would be debated and challenged (that maritime remains and their caloric contribution were overestimated, for example),[21] but have been treated as plausible as late as 2005, when Mann conducted a summary of the literature.[1]

Concomitant to the maritime subsistence hypothesis was an implied dominance of sites immediately adjacent to the coast over other centers. This idea was shaken by the realization of the magnitude of Caral, an inland site. Supplemental to a 1997 article by Shady dating Caral, a 2001 Science news article emphasized the dominance of agriculture and also suggested that Caral was the oldest urban center in Peru (and the entire Americas). It rejected the idea that civilization might have begun adjacent to the coast and then moved inland. One archaeologist was quoted as suggesting that "rather than coastal antecedents to monumental inland sites, what we have now are coastal satellite villages to monumental inland sites".[14]

These assertions were quickly challenged by Sandweiss and Moseley, who observed that Caral, although being the largest and most complex preceramic site, it is not the oldest. They admitted the importance of agriculture to industry and to augment diet, while broadly affirming "the formative role of marine resources in early Andean civilization".[22] Scholars now agree that the inland sites did have significantly greater populations, and that there were "so many more people along the four rivers than on the shore that they had to have been dominant".[1]

The remaining question is which of the areas developed first and created a template for subsequent development.[23] Haas rejects suggestions that maritime development at sites immediately adjacent to the coast was initial, pointing to contemporaneous development based on his dating.[2] Moseley remains convinced that coastal Aspero is the oldest site, and that its maritime subsistence served as a basis for the civilization.[1][22]

Cotton and food sources edit

The use of cotton (of the species Gossypium barbadense) played an important economic role in the relationship between the inland and the coastal settlements in this area of Peru. Nevertheless, scholars are still divided over the exact chronology of these developments.[1][13]

Although not edible, cotton was the most important product of irrigation in the Caral-Supe culture, vital to the production of fishing nets (that in turn provided maritime resources) as well as to textiles and textile technology. Haas notes that "control over cotton allows a ruling elite to provide the benefit of cloth for clothing, bags, wraps, and adornment".[13] He is willing to admit to a mutual dependency dilemma: "The prehistoric residents of the Norte Chico needed the fish resources for their protein and the fishermen needed the cotton to make the nets to catch the fish."[13] Thus, identifying cotton as a vital resource produced in the inland does not by itself resolve the issue of whether the inland centers were a progenitor for those on the coast, or vice versa. Moseley argues that successful maritime centers would have moved inland to find cotton.[1]

In a 2018 publication, David G. Beresford-Jones with coauthors have defended Moseley’s (1975) Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization (MFAC) hypothesis.[24]

The authors modified and refined the Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization hypothesis of Moseley. Thus, according to them, the MFAC hypothesis now “emerges more persuasive than ever”. It was the potential for increased quantities of food production that the cultivation of cotton allowed that was the key in precipitating revolutionary social change and social complexity, according to the authors. Previous to that, the gathering of bast fibers of wild Asclepias was used for fiber production, which was far less efficient.[citation needed]

Beresford-Jones and others also offered further support for their theories in 2021.[25]

History of research edit

It was Swiss archaeologist Frédéric Engel [fr], originally, who coined the term "Cotton Preceramic Stage" in 1957 in order to describe the unusual coastal sites such Norte Chico that had cotton but lacked ceramics and were very ancient. This stage was seen as running for about 1200 years from 3000 to 1800 BC.[26][27]

The development of Caral-Supe is particularly remarkable for the apparent absence of an agricultural staple food. However, recent studies increasingly dispute this and point to maize as a dietary backbone of this and later pre-Columbian civilizations.[28] Moseley found a small number of maize cobs in 1973 at Aspero (also seen in site work in the 1940s and 1950s)[7] but has since called the find "problematic".[22] However, increasing evidence has emerged about the importance of maize in this period:

Archaeological testing at a number of sites in the Norte Chico region of the north central coast provides a broad range of empirical data on the production, processing, and consumption of maize. New data drawn from coprolites, pollen records, and stone tool residues, combined with 126 radiocarbon dates, demonstrate that maize was widely grown, intensively processed, and constituted a primary component of the diet throughout the period from 3000 to 1800 BC.[18]

For Beresford-Jones, his new research on the two nearby ancient coastal settlements of La Yerba, on the east bank of Ica River, Peru (Río Ica) was very important. This is not far from the southern Peruvian town of Ica. The earlier of these settlement was La Yerba II (7571–6674 Cal BP, or ca 5570-4670 BC). When it was occupied, La Yerba II shell midden was situated rather close to the ancient surf line. This was not a permanently occupied site.[24]

A somewhat later site, La Yerba III, on the other hand, was a permanently occupied settlement, and shows a population that was an order of magnitude greater than earlier. Obsidian debitage was abundant at La Yerba III, as opposed to earlier. This suggests an increasing interaction extending to the highlands where obsidian was procured.[24]

The population of La Yerba III already practiced some floodplain horticulture. They cultivated gourds, Phaseolus, and Canavalia beans, and plant fiber production was of great importance for their fishing economy. Therefore, they were “pre-adapted to a Cotton Revolution".[24]

Social organization edit

 
Base of Caral-Supe pyramids

Government edit

 
Remains of the two main Caral pyramids in the arid Supe Valley
 
Monolith in Caral
 
Altar of the Holy Fire, on top of the Templo Mayor

The degree of centralized authority is difficult to ascertain, but architectural construction patterns are indicative, at least in certain places at certain times, of an elite population who wielded considerable power: while some of the monumental architecture was constructed incrementally, other buildings, such as the two main platform mounds at Caral,[9] appear to have been constructed in one or two intense construction phases.[13] As further evidence of centralized control, Haas points to remains of large stone warehouses found at Upaca, on the Pativilca, as emblematic of authorities able to control vital resources such as cotton.[1]

Haas suggests that the labour mobilization patterns revealed by the archaeological evidence, point to a unique emergence of human government, one of two alongside Sumer (or three, if Mesoamerica is included as a separate case). While in other cases, the idea of government would have been borrowed or copied, in this small group, government was invented. Other archaeologists have rejected such claims as hyperbolic.[1]

In exploring the basis of possible government, Haas suggests three broad bases of power for early complex societies:[citation needed]

  • economic,
  • ideology, and
  • physical.

He finds the first two present in ancient Caral-Supe.[citation needed]

Economic edit

Economic authority would have rested on the control of cotton, edible plants, and associated trade relationships, with power centered on the inland sites. Haas tentatively suggests that the scope of this economic power base may have extended widely: there are only two confirmed shore sites in the Caral-Supe (Aspero and Bandurria) and possibly two more, but cotton fishing nets and domesticated plants have been found up and down the Peruvian coast. It is possible that the major inland centers of Caral-Supe, were at the center of a broad regional trade network centered on these resources.[13]

Citing Shady, a 2005 article in Discover magazine suggests a rich and varied trade life: "[Caral] exported its own products and those of Aspero to distant communities in exchange for exotic imports: Spondylus shells from the coast of Ecuador, rich dyes from the Andean highlands, hallucinogenic snuff from the Amazon."[29] (Given the still limited extent of Caral-Supe research, such claims should be treated circumspectly.) Other reports on Shady's work indicate Caral traded with communities in the jungle farther inland and, possibly, with people from the mountains.[30]

Ideology edit

Haas postulates that ideological power exercised by leadership was based on apparent access to deities and the supernatural.[13] Evidence regarding Caral-Supe religion is limited: in 2003, an image of the Staff God, a leering figure with a hood and fangs, was found on a gourd that dated to 2250 BC. The Staff God is a major deity of later Andean cultures, and Winifred Creamer suggests the find points to worship of common symbols of deities.[31][32] As with much other research at Caral-Supe, the nature and significance of the find has been disputed by other researchers.[NB 2]

Mann postulates that the act of architectural construction and maintenance at Caral-Supe may have been a spiritual or religious experience: a process of communal exaltation and ceremony.[23] Shady has called Caral "the sacred city" (la ciudad sagrada)[8] and reports that socio-economic and political focus was on the temples, which were periodically remodeled, with major burnt offerings associated with the remodeling.[33]

Physical edit

Haas notes the absence of any suggestion of physical bases of power, that is, defensive construction, at Caral-Supe. There is no evidence of warfare "of any kind or at any level during the Preceramic Period".[13] Mutilated bodies, burned buildings, and other tell-tale signs of violence are absent and settlement patterns are completely non-defensive.[23] The evidence of the development of complex government in the absence of warfare contrasts markedly to archaeological theory, which suggests that human beings move away from kin-based groups to larger units resembling "states" for mutual defense of often scarce resources. In Caral-Supe, a vital resource was present: arable land generally, and the cotton crop specifically, but Mann noted that apparently, the move to greater complexity by the culture was not driven by the need for defense or warfare.[23]

Sites and architecture edit

 
Terraced construction of pyramid at Caral, with stone fill
 
Shicra bag with stones at Caral

Caral-Supe sites are known for their density of large sites with immense architecture.[34] Haas argues that the density of sites in such a small area is globally unique for a nascent civilization. During the third millennium BC, Caral-Supe may have been the most densely populated area of the world (excepting, possibly, Northern China).[13] The Supe, Pativilca, Fortaleza, and Huaura River Valleys of Caral-Supe each have several related sites.[citation needed]

Evidence from the ground-breaking work during 1973 at Aspero, at the mouth of the Supe Valley, suggested a site of approximately 13 hectares (32 acres). Surveying of the midden suggested extensive prehistoric construction activity. Small-scale terracing was noted, along with more sophisticated platform mound masonry. As many as eleven artificial mounds were estimated to exist at the site. Moseley calls these "Corporate Labor Platforms", given that their size, layout, and construction materials and techniques would have required an organized workforce.[7]

The survey of the northern rivers found sites between 10 and 100 ha (25 and 247 acres); between one and seven large platform mounds—rectangular, terraced pyramids—were discovered, ranging in size from 3,000 m3 (110,000 cu ft) to more than 100,000 m3 (3,500,000 cu ft).[2] Shady notes that the central zone of Caral, with monumental architecture, covers an area of just greater than 65 hectares (160 acres). Also, six platform mounds, numerous smaller mounds, two sunken circular plazas, and a variety of residential architecture were discovered at this site.[9]

The monumental architecture was constructed with quarried stone and river cobbles. Using reed "shicra-bags", some of which have been preserved,[35] laborers would have hauled the material to sites by hand. Roger Atwood of Archaeology magazine describes the process:

Armies of workers would gather a long, durable grass known as shicra in the highlands above the city, tie the grass strands into loosely meshed bags, fill the bags with boulders, and then pack the trenches behind each successive retaining wall of the step pyramids with the stone-filled bags.[36]

In this way, the people of Norte Chico achieved formidable architectural success. The largest of the platforms mounds at Caral, the Piramide Mayor, measures 160 by 150 m (520 by 490 ft) and rises 18 m (59 ft) high.[9] In its summation of the 2001 Shady paper, the BBC suggests workers would have been "paid or compelled" to work on centralized projects of this sort, with dried anchovies possibly serving as a form of currency.[37] Mann points to "ideology, charisma, and skilfully timed reinforcement" from leaders.[1]

Development and absent technologies edit

 
The presence of quipu tentatively suggests a "proto-writing" system in ancient Caral-Supe

When compared to the common Eurasian models of the development of civilization, Caral-Supe's differences are striking. In Caral-Supe, a total lack of ceramics persists across the period. Crops were cooked by roasting.[37] The lack of pottery was accompanied by a lack of archaeologically apparent art. In conversation with Mann, Alvaro Ruiz observes: "In the Norte Chico we see almost no visual arts. No sculpture, no carving or bas-relief, almost no painting or drawing—the interiors are completely bare. What we do see are these huge mounds—and textiles."[1]

While the absence of ceramics appears anomalous, Mann notes that the presence of textiles is intriguing. Quipu (or khipu), string-based recording devices, have been found at Caral, suggesting a writing, or proto-writing, system at Caral-Supe.[38] (The discovery was reported by Mann in Science in 2005, but has not been formally published or described by Shady.) The exact use of quipu in this and later Andean cultures has been widely debated. Originally, it was believed to be a simple mnemonic technique used to record numeric information, such as a count of items bought and sold. Evidence has emerged, however, that the quipu also may have recorded logographic information in the same way writing does. Research has focused on the much larger sample of a few hundred quipu dating to Inca times. The Caral-Supe discovery remains singular and undeciphered.[39]

Other finds at Caral-Supe have proved suggestive. While visual arts appear absent, the people may have played instrumental music: thirty-two flutes, crafted from pelican bone, have been discovered.[1][29]

The oldest known depiction of the Staff God was found in 2003 on some broken gourd fragments in a burial site in the Pativilca River Valley and the gourd was carbon dated to 2250 BCE.[40] While still fragmentary, such archaeological evidence corresponds to the patterns of later Andean civilization and may indicate that Caral-Supe served as a template. Along with the specific finds, Mann highlights

"the primacy of exchange over a wide area, the penchant for collective, festive civic work projects, [and] the high valuation of textiles and textile technology" within Norte Chico as patterns that would recur later in the Peruvian cradle of civilization."[1]

Academic disputes edit

 
Ruth Shady, Peruvian archaeologist, in Caral, 2014

The magnitude of the Caral-Supe discovery has generated academic controversy among researchers. The "monumental feud", as described by Archaeology, has included "public insults, a charge of plagiarism, ethics inquiries in both Peru and the United States, and complaints by Peruvian officials to the U.S. government".[36] The lead author of the seminal paper of April 2001[9] was a Peruvian, Ruth Shady, with co-authors Jonathan Haas and Winifred Creamer, a married United States team; the co-authoring was reportedly suggested by Haas, in the hopes that the involvement of United States researchers would help secure funds for carbon dating as well as future research funding. Later, Shady charged the couple with plagiarism and insufficient attribution, suggesting the pair had received credit for her research, which had begun in 1994.[29][41]

At issue is credit for the discovery of the civilization, naming it, and developing the theoretical models to explain it. In 1997, Shady described a civilization located on the Supe River, with Caral at its center, although she suggested a larger geographic base for the society.[42]

In 2004, Haas et al. wrote that "Our recent work in the neighboring Pativilca and Fortaleza has revealed that Caral and Aspero were but two of a much larger number of major Late Archaic sites in the Norte Chico", while noting Shady only in footnotes.[2] Attribution of this type is what has angered Shady and her supporters. Shady's position has been hampered by a lack of funding for archaeological research in her native Peru, as well as the media advantages of North American researchers in disputes of this type.[30]

Haas and Creamer were cleared of the plagiarism charge by their institutions. The science advisory council of the Chicago Field Museum of Natural History rebuked Haas for press releases and web pages that gave too little credit to Shady and inflated the American couple's role as discoverers.[29]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Interior" and "inland" do not refer here to the mountainous interior of Peru proper. All of the Norte Chico sites are broadly coastal, within 100 km (62 mi) of the coast and within the Peruvian littoral (Caral is 23 km [14 mi] inland). "Interior" and "inland" are used here to contrast with sites that are literally adjacent to the ocean.[citation needed]
  2. ^ Krysztof Makowski, as reported by Mann (1491), suggests there is little evidence that the peoples of Andean civilizations worshipped an overarching deity. The figure may have been carved by a later civilization onto an ancient gourd, as it was found in strata dating between 900 and 1300 AD.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mann, Charles C. (2006) [2005]. 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. Vintage Books. pp. 199–212. ISBN 1-4000-3205-9.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Haas, Jonathan; Winifred Creamer; Alvaro Ruiz (23 December 2004). "Dating the Late Archaic occupation of the Norte Chico region in Peru". Nature. 432 (7020): 1020–1023. Bibcode:2004Natur.432.1020H. doi:10.1038/nature03146. PMID 15616561. S2CID 4426545.
  3. ^ a b c (Press release). Northern Illinois University. 2004-12-22. Archived from the original on February 9, 2007. Retrieved 2007-02-01.
  4. ^ "The Ancient Andes". History Guild. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
  5. ^ "detailed map of Norte Chico sites".
  6. ^ "Sacred City of Caral-Supe". UNESCO. Retrieved 2011-06-09.
  7. ^ a b c d Moseley, Michael E.; Gordon R. Willey (1973). "Aspero, Peru: A Reexamination of the Site and Its Implications". American Antiquity. Society for American Archaeology. 38 (4): 452–468. doi:10.2307/279151. JSTOR 279151. S2CID 163284313. "We see the site as a 'peaking' of an essentially non-agricultural economy. Subsistence was still, basically, from the sea. But such subsistence supported a sedentary style of life, with communities of appreciable size."
  8. ^ a b Shady Solís, Ruth Martha (1997). La ciudad sagrada de Caral-Supe en los albores de la civilización en el Perú (in Spanish). Lima: UNMSM, Fondo Editorial. Retrieved 2007-03-03.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Shady Solis, Ruth; Jonathan Haas; Winifred Creamer (27 April 2001). "Dating Caral, a Preceramic Site in the Supe Valley on the Central Coast of Peru". Science. 292 (5517): 723–726. Bibcode:2001Sci...292..723S. doi:10.1126/science.1059519. PMID 11326098. S2CID 10172918.
  10. ^ See CNN, for instance. Given the tentative nature of much research surrounding Norte Chico, readers should be cautious of claims in general news sources.
  11. ^ "History of Peru". HISTORYWORLD. Retrieved 2007-01-31.
  12. ^ Roberts, J.M. (2004). The New Penguin History of the World (Fourth ed.). London: Penguin Books. pp. 153. ISBN 9780141007236. [The Americas] are millennia behind the development of civilization elsewhere, whatever the cause of that may be. "The implied laggardness appears disproven by Norte Chico; in his work, Mann is sharply critical of the inattention provided the Pre-Columbian Americas."
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Haas, Jonathan; Winifred Creamer; Alvaro Ruiz (2005). "Power and the Emergence of Complex Polities in the Peruvian Preceramic". Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association. 14 (1): 37–52. doi:10.1525/ap3a.2004.14.037.
  14. ^ a b Pringle, Heather (2001-04-27). "The First Urban Center in the Americas". Science. 292 (5517): 621. doi:10.1126/science.292.5517.621. PMID 11330310. S2CID 130819896."The claim in this Science 'News of the Week' column that Caral is the oldest urban center in the Americas is highly uncertain."
  15. ^ Rongxing Guo (2017), Behaviors of Nations. Dynamic Developments and the Origins of Civilizations. ISBN 9783319487724. Springer International Publishing. p. 49
  16. ^ Ruth Shady Solis (2006), America’s First City? The Case of Late Archaic Caral
  17. ^ Ruth Shady Solis (2006), America’s First City? The Case of Late Archaic Caral
  18. ^ a b Haas, J.; Creamer, W.; Huaman Mesia, L.; Goldstein, D.; Reinhard, K.; Rodriguez, C. V. (2013). "Evidence for maize (Zea mays) in the Late Archaic (3000–1800 B.C.) in the Norte Chico region of Peru". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 110 (13): 4945–9. Bibcode:2013PNAS..110.4945H. doi:10.1073/pnas.1219425110. PMC 3612639. PMID 23440194.
  19. ^ Moseley, Michael. . The Hall of Ma'at. Archived from the original on 2019-08-28. Retrieved 2008-06-13.
  20. ^ Moseley, Michael (1975). The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization. Menlo Park: Cummings. ISBN 0-8465-4800-3.
  21. ^ Raymond, J. Scott (1981). "The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization: A Reconsideration of the Evidence". American Antiquity. Society for American Archaeology. 46 (4): 806–821. doi:10.2307/280107. JSTOR 280107. S2CID 164171603.
  22. ^ a b c Sandweiss, Daniel H.; Michael E. Moseley (2001). "Amplifying Importance of New Research in Peru". Science. 294 (5547): 1651–1653. doi:10.1126/science.294.5547.1651d. PMID 11724063. S2CID 9301114.
  23. ^ a b c d Mann, Charles C. (7 January 2005). "Oldest Civilization in the Americas Revealed". Science. 307 (5706): 34–35. doi:10.1126/science.307.5706.34. PMID 15637250. S2CID 161589785.
  24. ^ a b c d Beresford-Jones, David; Pullen, Alexander; Chauca, George; Cadwallader, Lauren; García, Maria; Salvatierra, Isabel; Whaley, Oliver; Vásquez, Víctor; Arce, Susana; Lane, Kevin; French, Charles (2017-06-29). "Refining the Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization: How Plant Fiber Technology Drove Social Complexity During the Preceramic Period". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 25 (2): 393–425. doi:10.1007/s10816-017-9341-3. ISSN 1072-5369. PMC 5953975. PMID 29782575.
  25. ^ Beresford-Jones, David G.; Pomeroy, Emma; Alday, Camila; Benfer, Robert; Quilter, Jeffrey; O'Connell, Tamsin C.; Lightfoot, Emma (2021-05-06). "Diet and Lifestyle in the First Villages of the Middle Preceramic: Insights from Stable Isotope and Osteological Analyses of Human Remains from Paloma, Chilca I, La Yerba III, and Morro I". Latin American Antiquity. Cambridge University Press (CUP). 32 (4): 741–759. doi:10.1017/laq.2021.24. ISSN 1045-6635. S2CID 235569923.
  26. ^ The origins and development of complex society in Andean South America. 2022-03-18 at the Wayback Machine Field Museum - fieldmuseum.org
  27. ^ Engel, Frederic (1957), "Sites et Etablissements sans Céramique de la Côte Péruvienne." Journal de la Société de Américanistes, Nueva Serie 44: 43-95
  28. ^ Kinver, Mark (February 25, 2013). "Maize was key in early Andean civilisation, study shows". BBC News Online. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  29. ^ a b c d Miller, Kenneth (September 2005). "Showdown at the O.K. Caral". Discover. 26 (9). Retrieved 2009-10-22.
  30. ^ a b Belsie, Laurent (January 2002). "Civilization lost?". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
  31. ^ Hoag, Hanna (15 April 2003). "Oldest evidence of Andean religion found". Nature News (online). doi:10.1038/news030414-4.
  32. ^ Hecht, Jeff (14 April 2003). "America's oldest religious icon revealed". New Scientist (online). Retrieved 2007-02-13.
  33. ^ From summary three, Shady (1997)
  34. ^ Braswell, Geoffrey (16 April 2014). The Maya and Their Central American Neighbors: Settlement Patterns, Architecture, Hieroglyphic Texts and Ceramics. Routledge. p. 408. ISBN 978-1317756088.
  35. ^ White, Nancy. "Archaic/Preceramic (6000–2000 B.C.): Emergence of Sedentism, Early Ceramics". MATRIX. Indiana University Bloomington. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
  36. ^ a b Atwood, Roger (July–August 2005). "A Monumental Feud". Archaeology. 58 (4). Retrieved 2007-02-27.
  37. ^ a b "Oldest city in the Americas". BBC News. 26 April 2001. Retrieved 2007-02-16.
  38. ^ Mann, Charles C. (12 August 2005). "Unraveling Khipu's Secrets". Science. 309 (5737): 1008–1009. doi:10.1126/science.309.5737.1008. PMID 16099962. S2CID 161448364.
  39. ^ See 1491, appendix B.
  40. ^ Hannah Hoag (15 April 2003). "Oldest evidence of Andean religion found". Nature. doi:10.1038/news030414-4.
  41. ^ . Athena Review (news archive summary). Athena Publications Inc. 22 January 2005. Archived from the original on 2007-04-08. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
  42. ^ From summary three, Shady (1997): El número de centros urbanos (17), identificado en el valle de Supe, y su magnitud, requirieron de una gran cantidad de mano de obra y de los excedentes, para su edificación, mantenimiento, remodelación y enterramiento. Si consideramos exclusivamente la capacidad productiva de este pequeño valle, esa inversión no habría podido ser realizada sin la participación de las comunidades de los valles vecinos. The number of urban centers (17) identified in the Supe Valley, and their magnitude, requires a great quantity of surplus labor for their construction, maintenance, remodeling and burial. If we consider exclusively the productive capacity of this small valley, this investment could not have been realized without the participation of the communities of neighboring valleys.

Further reading edit

  • Sandweiss, D. H.; Shady Solís, R.; Moseley, M. E.; Keeferd, D. K.; Ortloff, C. R. (2009). "Environmental change and economic development in coastal Peru between 5,800 and 3,600 years ago". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA. 106 (5): 1359–1363. Bibcode:2009PNAS..106.1359S. doi:10.1073/pnas.0812645106. PMC 2635784. PMID 19164564.
  • Shady, Ruth; Kleihege, Cristopher, eds. (2008). Caral: la primera civilización de América = the first civilization in the Americas. Lima: Universidad de San Martín de Porres. ISBN 978-9972-33-792-5.
  • Shady Solís, Ruth (2005). Caral Supe, Perú: the Caral-Supe civilization: 5,000 years of cultural identity in Peru. Lima: Instituto Nacional de Cultura. ISBN 9972-9738-4-0.

External links edit

  • Caral-Supe at Google Maps
  • Press kit photos and video of Caral

caral, supe, civilization, caral, supe, also, known, caral, norte, chico, complex, columbian, society, that, included, many, thirty, major, population, centers, what, caral, region, north, central, coastal, peru, civilization, flourished, between, fourth, seco. Caral Supe also known as Caral and Norte Chico was a complex pre Columbian era society that included as many as thirty major population centers in what is now the Caral region of north central coastal Peru The civilization flourished between the fourth and second millennia BC with the formation of the first city generally dated to around 3500 BC at Huaricanga in the Fortaleza area 1 It is from 3100 BC onward that large scale human settlement and communal construction become clearly apparent 2 which lasted until a period of decline around 1800 BC 3 Since the early twenty first century it has been established as the oldest known civilization in the Americas and as one of the six sites where civilisation separately originated in the ancient world 4 Caral SupeMap of Caral Supe sites showing their locations in PeruAlternative namesCaral Norte ChicoGeographical rangeLima PeruPeriodCotton Pre CeramicDatesc 3 500 BCE c 1 800 BCEType siteAsperoPreceded byLauricochaFollowed byKotoshReconstruction of one of the pyramids of AsperoThis civilization flourished along three rivers the Fortaleza the Pativilca and the Supe These river valleys each have large clusters of sites Farther south there are several associated sites along the Huaura River 5 The alternative name Caral Supe is derived from the city of Caral 6 in the Supe Valley a large and well studied Caral Supe site Complex society in Caral Supe arose a millennium after Sumer in Mesopotamia was contemporaneous with the Egyptian pyramids and predated the Mesoamerican Olmec by nearly two millennia In archaeological nomenclature Caral Supe is a pre ceramic culture of the pre Columbian Late Archaic it completely lacked ceramics and no evidence of visual art has survived The most impressive achievement of the civilization was its monumental architecture including large earthwork platform mounds and sunken circular plazas Archaeological evidence suggests use of textile technology and possibly the worship of common deity symbols both of which recur in pre Columbian Andean cultures Sophisticated government is presumed to have been required to manage the ancient Caral Questions remain over its organization particularly the influence of food resources on politics Archaeologists have been aware of ancient sites in the area since at least the 1940s early work occurred at Aspero on the coast a site identified as early as 1905 7 and later at Caral farther inland In the late 1990s Peruvian archaeologists led by Ruth Shady provided the first extensive documentation of the civilization with work at Caral 8 A 2001 paper in Science providing a survey of the Caral research 9 and a 2004 article in Nature describing fieldwork and radiocarbon dating across a wider area 2 revealed Caral Supe s full significance and led to widespread interest 10 Contents 1 History and geography 1 1 Influence 2 Geographical links 3 Maritime coast and agricultural interior 3 1 Confirmed diet 3 2 Theory of a maritime foundation for Andean civilization 3 3 Cotton and food sources 3 4 History of research 4 Social organization 4 1 Government 4 1 1 Economic 4 1 2 Ideology 4 1 3 Physical 5 Sites and architecture 6 Development and absent technologies 7 Academic disputes 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory and geography edit nbsp Remains of platform mound structures at CaralThe dating of the Caral Supe sites has pushed back the estimated beginning date of complex societies in the Peruvian region by more than one thousand years The Chavin culture c 900 BC had previously been considered the first civilization of the area Regularly it still is cited incorrectly as such in general works 11 12 The discovery of Caral Supe has also shifted the focus of research away from the highland areas of the Andes and lowlands adjacent to the mountains where the Chavin and later Inca had their major centers to the Peruvian littoral or coastal regions Caral is located in a north central area of the coast approximately 150 to 200 km north of Lima roughly bounded by the Lurin Valley on the south and the Casma Valley on the north It comprises four coastal valleys the Huaura Supe Pativilca and Fortaleza Known sites are concentrated in the latter three which share a common coastal plain The three principal valleys cover only 1 800 km and research has emphasized the density of the population centers 13 The Peruvian littoral appears an improbable even aberrant candidate for the pristine development of civilization compared to other world centers 1 It is extremely arid bounded by two rain shadows caused by the Andes to the east and the Pacific trade winds to the west The region is punctuated by more than 50 rivers that carry Andean snowmelt The development of widespread irrigation from these water sources is seen as decisive in the emergence of Caral Supe 3 14 since all of the monumental architecture at various sites has been found close to irrigation channels citation needed The radiocarbon work of Jonathan Haas et al found that 10 of 95 samples taken in the Pativilca and Fortaleza areas dated from before 3500 BC The oldest dating from 9210 BC provides limited indication of human settlement during the Pre Columbian Early Archaic era Two dates of 3700 BC are associated with communal architecture but are likely to be anomalous It is from 3200 BC onward that large scale human settlement and communal construction are clearly apparent 2 Mann in a survey of the literature in 2005 suggests sometime before 3200 BC and possibly before 3500 BC as the beginning date of the Caral Supe formative period He notes that the earliest date securely associated with a city is 3500 BC at Huaricanga in the Fortaleza area of the north based on Haas s dates 1 Haas s early third millennium dates suggest that the development of coastal and inland sites occurred in parallel But from 2500 to 2000 BC during the period of greatest expansion the population and development decisively shifted toward the inland sites All development apparently occurred at large interior sites such as Caral although they remained dependent on fish and shellfish from the coast 2 The peak in dates is in keeping with Shady s dates at Caral which show habitation from 2627 BC to 2020 BC 9 That coastal and inland sites developed in tandem remains disputed however see next section citation needed Influence edit By around 2200 BC the influence of Norte Chico civilization spread far along the coast To the south it went as far as the Chillon valley and the site of El Paraiso To the north it spread as far as the Santa River valley 15 c 1800 BC the Caral Supe civilization began to decline with more powerful centers appearing to the south and north along the coast and to the east inside the belt of the Andes The success of irrigation based agriculture at Caral Supe may have contributed to its being eclipsed Anthropologist Professor Winifred Creamer of Northern Illinois University notes that when this civilization is in decline we begin to find extensive canals farther north People were moving to more fertile ground and taking their knowledge of irrigation with them 3 It would be a thousand years before the rise of the next great Peruvian culture the Chavin citation needed nbsp Caral panoramaGeographical links editCultural links with the highland areas have been noted by archaeologists Ruth Shady highlights the links with the Kotosh Religious Tradition 16 Numerous architectural features found among the settlements of Supe including subterranean circular courts stepped pyramids and sequential platforms as well as material remains and their cultural implications excavated at Aspero and the valley sites we are digging Caral Chupacigarro Lurihuasi Miraya are shared with other settlements of the area that participated in what is known as the Kotosh Religious Tradition Most specific among these features include rooms with benches and hearths with subterranean ventilation ducts wall niches biconvex beads and musical flutes 17 excessive quote Maritime coast and agricultural interior editResearch into Caral Supe continues with many unsettled questions Debate is ongoing regarding two related questions the degree to which the flourishing of the Caral Supe was based on maritime food resources and the exact relationship this implies between the coastal and inland sites NB 1 Confirmed diet edit A broad outline of the Caral Supe diet has been suggested At Caral the edible domesticated plants noted by Shady are squash beans lucuma guava pacay Inga feuilleei and sweet potato 9 Haas et al noted the same foods in their survey farther north while adding avocado and achira In 2013 good evidence for maize also was documented by Haas et al see below 18 There was also a significant seafood component at both coastal and inland sites Shady notes that animal remains are almost exclusively marine at Caral including clams and mussels and large amounts of anchovies and sardines 9 That the anchovy fish reached inland is clear 1 although Haas suggests that shellfish which would include clams and mussels sea mammals and seaweed do not appear to have been significant portions of the diet in the inland non maritime sites 13 Theory of a maritime foundation for Andean civilization edit nbsp The people from the Caral Supe civilization used vertebrae of the blue whale as stoolsThe role of seafood in the Caral Supe diet has aroused debate Much early fieldwork was conducted in the region of Aspero on the coast before the full scope and inter connectedness of the several sites of the civilization were realized In a 1973 paper Michael E Moseley contended that a maritime subsistence seafood economy had been the basis of the society and its remarkably early flourishing 7 a theory later elaborated as a maritime foundation of Andean civilization MFAC 19 20 He confirmed a previously observed lack of ceramics at Aspero and he deduced that hummocks on the site constituted the remains of artificial platform mounds citation needed This thesis of a maritime foundation was contrary to the general scholarly consensus that the rise of civilization was based on intensive agriculture particularly of at least one cereal The production of agricultural surpluses had long been seen as essential in promoting population density and the emergence of complex society Moseley s ideas would be debated and challenged that maritime remains and their caloric contribution were overestimated for example 21 but have been treated as plausible as late as 2005 when Mann conducted a summary of the literature 1 Concomitant to the maritime subsistence hypothesis was an implied dominance of sites immediately adjacent to the coast over other centers This idea was shaken by the realization of the magnitude of Caral an inland site Supplemental to a 1997 article by Shady dating Caral a 2001 Science news article emphasized the dominance of agriculture and also suggested that Caral was the oldest urban center in Peru and the entire Americas It rejected the idea that civilization might have begun adjacent to the coast and then moved inland One archaeologist was quoted as suggesting that rather than coastal antecedents to monumental inland sites what we have now are coastal satellite villages to monumental inland sites 14 These assertions were quickly challenged by Sandweiss and Moseley who observed that Caral although being the largest and most complex preceramic site it is not the oldest They admitted the importance of agriculture to industry and to augment diet while broadly affirming the formative role of marine resources in early Andean civilization 22 Scholars now agree that the inland sites did have significantly greater populations and that there were so many more people along the four rivers than on the shore that they had to have been dominant 1 The remaining question is which of the areas developed first and created a template for subsequent development 23 Haas rejects suggestions that maritime development at sites immediately adjacent to the coast was initial pointing to contemporaneous development based on his dating 2 Moseley remains convinced that coastal Aspero is the oldest site and that its maritime subsistence served as a basis for the civilization 1 22 Cotton and food sources edit The use of cotton of the species Gossypium barbadense played an important economic role in the relationship between the inland and the coastal settlements in this area of Peru Nevertheless scholars are still divided over the exact chronology of these developments 1 13 Although not edible cotton was the most important product of irrigation in the Caral Supe culture vital to the production of fishing nets that in turn provided maritime resources as well as to textiles and textile technology Haas notes that control over cotton allows a ruling elite to provide the benefit of cloth for clothing bags wraps and adornment 13 He is willing to admit to a mutual dependency dilemma The prehistoric residents of the Norte Chico needed the fish resources for their protein and the fishermen needed the cotton to make the nets to catch the fish 13 Thus identifying cotton as a vital resource produced in the inland does not by itself resolve the issue of whether the inland centers were a progenitor for those on the coast or vice versa Moseley argues that successful maritime centers would have moved inland to find cotton 1 In a 2018 publication David G Beresford Jones with coauthors have defended Moseley s 1975 Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization MFAC hypothesis 24 The authors modified and refined the Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization hypothesis of Moseley Thus according to them the MFAC hypothesis now emerges more persuasive than ever It was the potential for increased quantities of food production that the cultivation of cotton allowed that was the key in precipitating revolutionary social change and social complexity according to the authors Previous to that the gathering of bast fibers of wild Asclepias was used for fiber production which was far less efficient citation needed Beresford Jones and others also offered further support for their theories in 2021 25 History of research edit It was Swiss archaeologist Frederic Engel fr originally who coined the term Cotton Preceramic Stage in 1957 in order to describe the unusual coastal sites such Norte Chico that had cotton but lacked ceramics and were very ancient This stage was seen as running for about 1200 years from 3000 to 1800 BC 26 27 The development of Caral Supe is particularly remarkable for the apparent absence of an agricultural staple food However recent studies increasingly dispute this and point to maize as a dietary backbone of this and later pre Columbian civilizations 28 Moseley found a small number of maize cobs in 1973 at Aspero also seen in site work in the 1940s and 1950s 7 but has since called the find problematic 22 However increasing evidence has emerged about the importance of maize in this period Archaeological testing at a number of sites in the Norte Chico region of the north central coast provides a broad range of empirical data on the production processing and consumption of maize New data drawn from coprolites pollen records and stone tool residues combined with 126 radiocarbon dates demonstrate that maize was widely grown intensively processed and constituted a primary component of the diet throughout the period from 3000 to 1800 BC 18 For Beresford Jones his new research on the two nearby ancient coastal settlements of La Yerba on the east bank of Ica River Peru Rio Ica was very important This is not far from the southern Peruvian town of Ica The earlier of these settlement was La Yerba II 7571 6674 Cal BP or ca 5570 4670 BC When it was occupied La Yerba II shell midden was situated rather close to the ancient surf line This was not a permanently occupied site 24 A somewhat later site La Yerba III on the other hand was a permanently occupied settlement and shows a population that was an order of magnitude greater than earlier Obsidian debitage was abundant at La Yerba III as opposed to earlier This suggests an increasing interaction extending to the highlands where obsidian was procured 24 The population of La Yerba III already practiced some floodplain horticulture They cultivated gourds Phaseolus and Canavalia beans and plant fiber production was of great importance for their fishing economy Therefore they were pre adapted to a Cotton Revolution 24 Social organization edit nbsp Base of Caral Supe pyramidsGovernment edit nbsp Remains of the two main Caral pyramids in the arid Supe Valley nbsp Monolith in Caral nbsp Altar of the Holy Fire on top of the Templo MayorThe degree of centralized authority is difficult to ascertain but architectural construction patterns are indicative at least in certain places at certain times of an elite population who wielded considerable power while some of the monumental architecture was constructed incrementally other buildings such as the two main platform mounds at Caral 9 appear to have been constructed in one or two intense construction phases 13 As further evidence of centralized control Haas points to remains of large stone warehouses found at Upaca on the Pativilca as emblematic of authorities able to control vital resources such as cotton 1 Haas suggests that the labour mobilization patterns revealed by the archaeological evidence point to a unique emergence of human government one of two alongside Sumer or three if Mesoamerica is included as a separate case While in other cases the idea of government would have been borrowed or copied in this small group government was invented Other archaeologists have rejected such claims as hyperbolic 1 In exploring the basis of possible government Haas suggests three broad bases of power for early complex societies citation needed economic ideology and physical He finds the first two present in ancient Caral Supe citation needed Economic edit Economic authority would have rested on the control of cotton edible plants and associated trade relationships with power centered on the inland sites Haas tentatively suggests that the scope of this economic power base may have extended widely there are only two confirmed shore sites in the Caral Supe Aspero and Bandurria and possibly two more but cotton fishing nets and domesticated plants have been found up and down the Peruvian coast It is possible that the major inland centers of Caral Supe were at the center of a broad regional trade network centered on these resources 13 Citing Shady a 2005 article in Discover magazine suggests a rich and varied trade life Caral exported its own products and those of Aspero to distant communities in exchange for exotic imports Spondylus shells from the coast of Ecuador rich dyes from the Andean highlands hallucinogenic snuff from the Amazon 29 Given the still limited extent of Caral Supe research such claims should be treated circumspectly Other reports on Shady s work indicate Caral traded with communities in the jungle farther inland and possibly with people from the mountains 30 Ideology edit Haas postulates that ideological power exercised by leadership was based on apparent access to deities and the supernatural 13 Evidence regarding Caral Supe religion is limited in 2003 an image of the Staff God a leering figure with a hood and fangs was found on a gourd that dated to 2250 BC The Staff God is a major deity of later Andean cultures and Winifred Creamer suggests the find points to worship of common symbols of deities 31 32 As with much other research at Caral Supe the nature and significance of the find has been disputed by other researchers NB 2 Mann postulates that the act of architectural construction and maintenance at Caral Supe may have been a spiritual or religious experience a process of communal exaltation and ceremony 23 Shady has called Caral the sacred city la ciudad sagrada 8 and reports that socio economic and political focus was on the temples which were periodically remodeled with major burnt offerings associated with the remodeling 33 Physical edit Haas notes the absence of any suggestion of physical bases of power that is defensive construction at Caral Supe There is no evidence of warfare of any kind or at any level during the Preceramic Period 13 Mutilated bodies burned buildings and other tell tale signs of violence are absent and settlement patterns are completely non defensive 23 The evidence of the development of complex government in the absence of warfare contrasts markedly to archaeological theory which suggests that human beings move away from kin based groups to larger units resembling states for mutual defense of often scarce resources In Caral Supe a vital resource was present arable land generally and the cotton crop specifically but Mann noted that apparently the move to greater complexity by the culture was not driven by the need for defense or warfare 23 Sites and architecture editSee also List of Norte Chico archaeological sites nbsp Terraced construction of pyramid at Caral with stone fill nbsp Shicra bag with stones at CaralCaral Supe sites are known for their density of large sites with immense architecture 34 Haas argues that the density of sites in such a small area is globally unique for a nascent civilization During the third millennium BC Caral Supe may have been the most densely populated area of the world excepting possibly Northern China 13 The Supe Pativilca Fortaleza and Huaura River Valleys of Caral Supe each have several related sites citation needed Evidence from the ground breaking work during 1973 at Aspero at the mouth of the Supe Valley suggested a site of approximately 13 hectares 32 acres Surveying of the midden suggested extensive prehistoric construction activity Small scale terracing was noted along with more sophisticated platform mound masonry As many as eleven artificial mounds were estimated to exist at the site Moseley calls these Corporate Labor Platforms given that their size layout and construction materials and techniques would have required an organized workforce 7 The survey of the northern rivers found sites between 10 and 100 ha 25 and 247 acres between one and seven large platform mounds rectangular terraced pyramids were discovered ranging in size from 3 000 m3 110 000 cu ft to more than 100 000 m3 3 500 000 cu ft 2 Shady notes that the central zone of Caral with monumental architecture covers an area of just greater than 65 hectares 160 acres Also six platform mounds numerous smaller mounds two sunken circular plazas and a variety of residential architecture were discovered at this site 9 The monumental architecture was constructed with quarried stone and river cobbles Using reed shicra bags some of which have been preserved 35 laborers would have hauled the material to sites by hand Roger Atwood of Archaeology magazine describes the process Armies of workers would gather a long durable grass known as shicra in the highlands above the city tie the grass strands into loosely meshed bags fill the bags with boulders and then pack the trenches behind each successive retaining wall of the step pyramids with the stone filled bags 36 In this way the people of Norte Chico achieved formidable architectural success The largest of the platforms mounds at Caral the Piramide Mayor measures 160 by 150 m 520 by 490 ft and rises 18 m 59 ft high 9 In its summation of the 2001 Shady paper the BBC suggests workers would have been paid or compelled to work on centralized projects of this sort with dried anchovies possibly serving as a form of currency 37 Mann points to ideology charisma and skilfully timed reinforcement from leaders 1 Development and absent technologies edit nbsp The presence of quipu tentatively suggests a proto writing system in ancient Caral SupeWhen compared to the common Eurasian models of the development of civilization Caral Supe s differences are striking In Caral Supe a total lack of ceramics persists across the period Crops were cooked by roasting 37 The lack of pottery was accompanied by a lack of archaeologically apparent art In conversation with Mann Alvaro Ruiz observes In the Norte Chico we see almost no visual arts No sculpture no carving or bas relief almost no painting or drawing the interiors are completely bare What we do see are these huge mounds and textiles 1 While the absence of ceramics appears anomalous Mann notes that the presence of textiles is intriguing Quipu or khipu string based recording devices have been found at Caral suggesting a writing or proto writing system at Caral Supe 38 The discovery was reported by Mann in Science in 2005 but has not been formally published or described by Shady The exact use of quipu in this and later Andean cultures has been widely debated Originally it was believed to be a simple mnemonic technique used to record numeric information such as a count of items bought and sold Evidence has emerged however that the quipu also may have recorded logographic information in the same way writing does Research has focused on the much larger sample of a few hundred quipu dating to Inca times The Caral Supe discovery remains singular and undeciphered 39 Other finds at Caral Supe have proved suggestive While visual arts appear absent the people may have played instrumental music thirty two flutes crafted from pelican bone have been discovered 1 29 The oldest known depiction of the Staff God was found in 2003 on some broken gourd fragments in a burial site in the Pativilca River Valley and the gourd was carbon dated to 2250 BCE 40 While still fragmentary such archaeological evidence corresponds to the patterns of later Andean civilization and may indicate that Caral Supe served as a template Along with the specific finds Mann highlights the primacy of exchange over a wide area the penchant for collective festive civic work projects and the high valuation of textiles and textile technology within Norte Chico as patterns that would recur later in the Peruvian cradle of civilization 1 Academic disputes edit nbsp Ruth Shady Peruvian archaeologist in Caral 2014The magnitude of the Caral Supe discovery has generated academic controversy among researchers The monumental feud as described by Archaeology has included public insults a charge of plagiarism ethics inquiries in both Peru and the United States and complaints by Peruvian officials to the U S government 36 The lead author of the seminal paper of April 2001 9 was a Peruvian Ruth Shady with co authors Jonathan Haas and Winifred Creamer a married United States team the co authoring was reportedly suggested by Haas in the hopes that the involvement of United States researchers would help secure funds for carbon dating as well as future research funding Later Shady charged the couple with plagiarism and insufficient attribution suggesting the pair had received credit for her research which had begun in 1994 29 41 At issue is credit for the discovery of the civilization naming it and developing the theoretical models to explain it In 1997 Shady described a civilization located on the Supe River with Caral at its center although she suggested a larger geographic base for the society 42 In 2004 Haas et al wrote that Our recent work in the neighboring Pativilca and Fortaleza has revealed that Caral and Aspero were but two of a much larger number of major Late Archaic sites in the Norte Chico while noting Shady only in footnotes 2 Attribution of this type is what has angered Shady and her supporters Shady s position has been hampered by a lack of funding for archaeological research in her native Peru as well as the media advantages of North American researchers in disputes of this type 30 Haas and Creamer were cleared of the plagiarism charge by their institutions The science advisory council of the Chicago Field Museum of Natural History rebuked Haas for press releases and web pages that gave too little credit to Shady and inflated the American couple s role as discoverers 29 See also edit nbsp Indigenous peoples of the Americas portal nbsp Peru portalAndean preceramic Iperu Peru tourist information List of Norte Chico archaeological sites Supe PuertoNotes edit Interior and inland do not refer here to the mountainous interior of Peru proper All of the Norte Chico sites are broadly coastal within 100 km 62 mi of the coast and within the Peruvian littoral Caral is 23 km 14 mi inland Interior and inland are used here to contrast with sites that are literally adjacent to the ocean citation needed Krysztof Makowski as reported by Mann 1491 suggests there is little evidence that the peoples of Andean civilizations worshipped an overarching deity The figure may have been carved by a later civilization onto an ancient gourd as it was found in strata dating between 900 and 1300 AD citation needed References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mann Charles C 2006 2005 1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus Vintage Books pp 199 212 ISBN 1 4000 3205 9 a b c d e f g Haas Jonathan Winifred Creamer Alvaro Ruiz 23 December 2004 Dating the Late Archaic occupation of the Norte Chico region in Peru Nature 432 7020 1020 1023 Bibcode 2004Natur 432 1020H doi 10 1038 nature03146 PMID 15616561 S2CID 4426545 a b c Archaeologists shed new light on Americas earliest known civilization Press release Northern Illinois University 2004 12 22 Archived from the original on February 9 2007 Retrieved 2007 02 01 The Ancient Andes History Guild Retrieved 2 April 2023 detailed map of Norte Chico sites Sacred City of Caral Supe UNESCO Retrieved 2011 06 09 a b c d Moseley Michael E Gordon R Willey 1973 Aspero Peru A Reexamination of the Site and Its Implications American Antiquity Society for American Archaeology 38 4 452 468 doi 10 2307 279151 JSTOR 279151 S2CID 163284313 We see the site as a peaking of an essentially non agricultural economy Subsistence was still basically from the sea But such subsistence supported a sedentary style of life with communities of appreciable size a b Shady Solis Ruth Martha 1997 La ciudad sagrada de Caral Supe en los albores de la civilizacion en el Peru in Spanish Lima UNMSM Fondo Editorial Retrieved 2007 03 03 a b c d e f g h Shady Solis Ruth Jonathan Haas Winifred Creamer 27 April 2001 Dating Caral a Preceramic Site in the Supe Valley on the Central Coast of Peru Science 292 5517 723 726 Bibcode 2001Sci 292 723S doi 10 1126 science 1059519 PMID 11326098 S2CID 10172918 See CNN for instance Given the tentative nature of much research surrounding Norte Chico readers should be cautious of claims in general news sources History of Peru HISTORYWORLD Retrieved 2007 01 31 Roberts J M 2004 The New Penguin History of the World Fourth ed London Penguin Books pp 153 ISBN 9780141007236 The Americas are millennia behind the development of civilization elsewhere whatever the cause of that may be The implied laggardness appears disproven by Norte Chico in his work Mann is sharply critical of the inattention provided the Pre Columbian Americas a b c d e f g h i j Haas Jonathan Winifred Creamer Alvaro Ruiz 2005 Power and the Emergence of Complex Polities in the Peruvian Preceramic Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association 14 1 37 52 doi 10 1525 ap3a 2004 14 037 a b Pringle Heather 2001 04 27 The First Urban Center in the Americas Science 292 5517 621 doi 10 1126 science 292 5517 621 PMID 11330310 S2CID 130819896 The claim in this Science News of the Week column that Caral is the oldest urban center in the Americas is highly uncertain Rongxing Guo 2017 Behaviors of Nations Dynamic Developments and the Origins of Civilizations ISBN 9783319487724 Springer International Publishing p 49 Ruth Shady Solis 2006 America s First City The Case of Late Archaic Caral Ruth Shady Solis 2006 America s First City The Case of Late Archaic Caral a b Haas J Creamer W Huaman Mesia L Goldstein D Reinhard K Rodriguez C V 2013 Evidence for maize Zea mays in the Late Archaic 3000 1800 B C in the Norte Chico region of Peru Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110 13 4945 9 Bibcode 2013PNAS 110 4945H doi 10 1073 pnas 1219425110 PMC 3612639 PMID 23440194 Moseley Michael The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization An Evolving Hypothesis The Hall of Ma at Archived from the original on 2019 08 28 Retrieved 2008 06 13 Moseley Michael 1975 The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization Menlo Park Cummings ISBN 0 8465 4800 3 Raymond J Scott 1981 The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization A Reconsideration of the Evidence American Antiquity Society for American Archaeology 46 4 806 821 doi 10 2307 280107 JSTOR 280107 S2CID 164171603 a b c Sandweiss Daniel H Michael E Moseley 2001 Amplifying Importance of New Research in Peru Science 294 5547 1651 1653 doi 10 1126 science 294 5547 1651d PMID 11724063 S2CID 9301114 a b c d Mann Charles C 7 January 2005 Oldest Civilization in the Americas Revealed Science 307 5706 34 35 doi 10 1126 science 307 5706 34 PMID 15637250 S2CID 161589785 a b c d Beresford Jones David Pullen Alexander Chauca George Cadwallader Lauren Garcia Maria Salvatierra Isabel Whaley Oliver Vasquez Victor Arce Susana Lane Kevin French Charles 2017 06 29 Refining the Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization How Plant Fiber Technology Drove Social Complexity During the Preceramic Period Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory Springer Science and Business Media LLC 25 2 393 425 doi 10 1007 s10816 017 9341 3 ISSN 1072 5369 PMC 5953975 PMID 29782575 Beresford Jones David G Pomeroy Emma Alday Camila Benfer Robert Quilter Jeffrey O Connell Tamsin C Lightfoot Emma 2021 05 06 Diet and Lifestyle in the First Villages of the Middle Preceramic Insights from Stable Isotope and Osteological Analyses of Human Remains from Paloma Chilca I La Yerba III and Morro I Latin American Antiquity Cambridge University Press CUP 32 4 741 759 doi 10 1017 laq 2021 24 ISSN 1045 6635 S2CID 235569923 The origins and development of complex society in Andean South America Archived 2022 03 18 at the Wayback Machine Field Museum fieldmuseum org Engel Frederic 1957 Sites et Etablissements sans Ceramique de la Cote Peruvienne Journal de la Societe de Americanistes Nueva Serie 44 43 95 Kinver Mark February 25 2013 Maize was key in early Andean civilisation study shows BBC News Online Retrieved March 1 2013 a b c d Miller Kenneth September 2005 Showdown at the O K Caral Discover 26 9 Retrieved 2009 10 22 a b Belsie Laurent January 2002 Civilization lost Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 2007 03 08 Hoag Hanna 15 April 2003 Oldest evidence of Andean religion found Nature News online doi 10 1038 news030414 4 Hecht Jeff 14 April 2003 America s oldest religious icon revealed New Scientist online Retrieved 2007 02 13 From summary three Shady 1997 Braswell Geoffrey 16 April 2014 The Maya and Their Central American Neighbors Settlement Patterns Architecture Hieroglyphic Texts and Ceramics Routledge p 408 ISBN 978 1317756088 White Nancy Archaic Preceramic 6000 2000 B C Emergence of Sedentism Early Ceramics MATRIX Indiana University Bloomington Retrieved 2007 03 08 a b Atwood Roger July August 2005 A Monumental Feud Archaeology 58 4 Retrieved 2007 02 27 a b Oldest city in the Americas BBC News 26 April 2001 Retrieved 2007 02 16 Mann Charles C 12 August 2005 Unraveling Khipu s Secrets Science 309 5737 1008 1009 doi 10 1126 science 309 5737 1008 PMID 16099962 S2CID 161448364 See 1491 appendix B Hannah Hoag 15 April 2003 Oldest evidence of Andean religion found Nature doi 10 1038 news030414 4 Peruvian archaeologist accuses two US archaeologists of plagiarism Athena Review news archive summary Athena Publications Inc 22 January 2005 Archived from the original on 2007 04 08 Retrieved 2007 03 08 From summary three Shady 1997 El numero de centros urbanos 17 identificado en el valle de Supe y su magnitud requirieron de una gran cantidad de mano de obra y de los excedentes para su edificacion mantenimiento remodelacion y enterramiento Si consideramos exclusivamente la capacidad productiva de este pequeno valle esa inversion no habria podido ser realizada sin la participacion de las comunidades de los valles vecinos The number of urban centers 17 identified in the Supe Valley and their magnitude requires a great quantity of surplus labor for their construction maintenance remodeling and burial If we consider exclusively the productive capacity of this small valley this investment could not have been realized without the participation of the communities of neighboring valleys Further reading editSandweiss D H Shady Solis R Moseley M E Keeferd D K Ortloff C R 2009 Environmental change and economic development in coastal Peru between 5 800 and 3 600 years ago Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 106 5 1359 1363 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 1359S doi 10 1073 pnas 0812645106 PMC 2635784 PMID 19164564 Shady Ruth Kleihege Cristopher eds 2008 Caral la primera civilizacion de America the first civilization in the Americas Lima Universidad de San Martin de Porres ISBN 978 9972 33 792 5 Shady Solis Ruth 2005 Caral Supe Peru the Caral Supe civilization 5 000 years of cultural identity in Peru Lima Instituto Nacional de Cultura ISBN 9972 9738 4 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caral Supe Caral Supe at Google Maps Northern Illinois University press kit photos Press kit photos and video of Caral Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caral Supe civilization amp oldid 1187319202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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