Boletín de Arqueología PUCP

URI permanente para esta comunidadhttp://54.81.141.168/handle/123456789/182540

ISSN: 1029-2004
e-ISSN: 2304-4292

El Boletín de Arqueología PUCP es la revista de la Especialidad de Arqueología del Departamento de Humanidades de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. El Boletín de Arqueología PUCP se inicia en 1997 como parte de la necesidad de contar con un foro de diálogo entre los arqueólogos nacionales, así como entre ellos y sus colegas extranjeros. Asimismo, la revista continúa la tradición iniciada por el Boletín del Seminario de Arqueología del Instituto Riva-Agüero (Nos. del 1 al 20, 1969-1978).

El Boletín de Arqueología PUCP se encuentra indizado en las siguientes plataformas: Latindex, Dialnet, CLASE, EbscoHost, Gale Cengage, JournalTOCs y Worldcat.

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  • Ítem
    Arqueología de las dependencias en América Latina: segunda parte
    (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2024-10-11) Mader, Christian; Conrad, Claire; Viteri Toledo, Tamia; Schubert, Hanna; Mauricio Llonto, Ana Cecilia
    No presenta resumen.
  • Ítem
    De lo visible a lo oculto: un estudio de visibilidad (SIG) en la región de Vilcabamba, Andes peruanos, durante los periodos Intermedio Tardío y Horizonte Tardío
    (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2024-10-25) Conrad, Claire; Mader, Christian
    The prehispanic Andes are an environment teeming with living beings, both human and non-human. Non-human entities exhibit many similar traits to Andean societies, including a hierarchy, characters with individual personalities and motivations. Regular interactions between humans and these entities were necessary to protect against them. Especially the most important entities, the highest peaks called apus, were potential protectors, but also a constant threat. Visibility and sight are an important aspect in the relationship, as anything within sight of an apu could be considered under its influence and thus could receive a positive or negative impact depending on its mood. This article focuses on that connection between Andean communities and the powerful apus, and how the Inca state could have used architecture to disrupt it using the example of the Vitcos valley. After the incorporation of the Vilcabamba region into the Tawantinsuyu, the Incas built Vitcos as their administrative and religious center and the former larger site Viracochan was abandoned. This meant moving a high-altitude settlement to the valley floor, changing the area that was visible to humans on a daily basis and impacting their communication with the apus of the Cordillera Vilcabamba.
  • Ítem
    Dependencia espacial entre sistemas de irrigación y patrones de asentamiento: el manejo del agua en la costa norte prehispánica del Perú
    (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2024-09-04) Schubert, Hanna M.; Mader, Christian
    On the northern Peruvian coast, where seasonal flooding and aridity and the effects of the phenomenon of El Niño characterise the desert landscape, water management systems adapted to the climate and landscape were built to enable agriculture. In this article, we review the archaeological literature on water management from its beginnings in the 2nd millennium BC to the technologies of the Chimu (1000-1470 AD) to draw conclusions about pre-Hispanic state development. In doing so, we observed a spatial connection between settlement distribution and water availability, including both natural sources and archaeologically verifiable artificial irrigation technologies, conditioned by its ecological and political setting. Our revision shows a significant change in the spatial connection between water resources and settlements in the Late Intermediate Period. Linked to this could be, on the one hand, different economic and sociopolitical organisational processes and, on the other hand, the potential for conflicts and consciously exploited power structures.
  • Ítem
    Dependencia y resistencia en la Amazonía colonial ecuatoriana: un estudio de cuentas de vidrio de una urna funeraria
    (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2024-09-04) Viteri Toledo, Tamia; Mader, Christian
    Glass beads found in pre-Hispanic and colonial archaeological contexts in the Ecuadorian Amazon have not been frequently reported in the academic literature. Yet the unique discovery of this type of objects in a funerary urn in the collections of the Museo Arqueológico y Centro Cultural de Orellana (MACCCO-EP), which has been catalogued as belonging to the Napo phase, allows us to emphasise their use in mortuary practices prevailing in a colonial context with strong asymmetrical dependencies. This article aims to present a typological analysis of this set of glass beads so as to discuss exchange networks and the uses given to this material of European origin in colonial society and in indigenous Amazonian societies. A comparison of the results with other sets of glass beads in the Americas indicates that they were widely used between the seventeenth and the nineteenth centuries in various Amazonian secondary burial contexts in urns, thus allowing for the renewal and resistance of these practices in the colonial, and possibly also in the republican period.
  • Ítem
    Arqueología de las dependencias en América Latina: una introducción
    (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2024-08-21) Mader, Christian
    Introducción