Tolas, fish traps and radiocarbon dating: The spatial characterization of the Mante˜no site of Ligüiqui in Ecuador and its contextualization within the chronological framework of other pre-Hispanic cultures
Metadatos
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Castro Priego, Manuel; Olmo Enciso, Lauro; Jiménez-Espejo, Francisco José; Labrada Ochoa, Marcos Octavio; Diarte Blasco, Pilar; Jijón Porras, Juan Andrés; García-Alix Daroca, AntonioEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
chronological sequence Ecuador Ligüiqui
Fecha
2024-12-06Referencia bibliográfica
Castro Priego, M. et. al. Radiocarbon (2024), pp. 1–28. [https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2024.111]
Patrocinador
Project Perduraciones, continuidad y ruptura. Nuevas realidades de desigualdad en la costa ecuatoriana central (SS. XVI-XVII), funded by the Spanish Ministry of Culture and Sport (Ref: 43-T002018N0000042859 and T002019N0000038722); Palarq Foundation (2017, 2018 and 2019); General Foundation of the University of Alcalá; RNM190 Research Group of Andalucía GovernmentResumen
Ecuador is a key area in South America when it comes to understanding the economic, social and archaeological aspects of pre-Hispanic cultures in the northwestern region of the Andes. Among the most complex societies to have inhabited this territory is the so-called Manteño culture (AD ∼800–1530), which spanned across most of Ecuador’s central Pacific coast. Ongoing research at the site of Ligüiqui (Manta, Manabí) has enabled us to obtain a more complete overview of the chronological sequence of the Manteño period as well as contributing further data on the advanced stage of social development reached during the period; characterized by the hierarchical arrangement of sites, the use of extensive settlement models, and semi-circular stone fish traps (corrales). In order to understand the role played by this coastal site in the complex Manteño culture, a detailed radiocarbon study was performed in the sequence of the Ligüiqui site. In addition, using a detailed review of available Manteño settlement radiocarbon data (13 sites and 64 dates), we established a chronostratigraphic framework for the culture. Our data indicate that Ligüiqui probably acted as a supply centre for marine-origin products from the twelfth century onwards with activity peaking during the Late Manteño period. A multisite comparison using Bayesian modeling indicates an early onset of the Manteño culture in Ligüiqui around AD 700, and a general demise in most of the sites AD ∼1500 or slightly before. This culture finally collapsed before AD ∼1600 during the early Spanish colonial period. Only one site, La Libertad, shows potential evidence of having remained a Manteño settlement after that date.