Death on the Early Formative Oaxaca coast: The human remains of La Consentida

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2017

Publication Title

Death on the Early Formative Oaxaca coast: The human remains of La Consentida

Volume

13

First Page

703

Last Page

711

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2016.11.045

ORCID

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9114-5875

Keywords

Mesoamerica, Oaxaca, Early Formative period, Mortuary practice, Bioarchaeology, Subsistence, Sedentism

Abstract

Based on calibrated AMS radiocarbon dates from stratigraphically controlled contexts, the Early Formative period site of La Consentida was occupied between 1950 and 1550 cal BCE. In addition to evidence of early pottery and mounded earthen architecture, this site has produced fourteen sets of human remains in twelve discrete burials. The people of La Consentida lived and died during a period of key socioeconomic transitions, including the establishment of sedentary villages, a shift toward agriculture, and the origins of formalized social inequality. In this paper, we discuss the archaeological context of La Consentida's burials and the results of bioarchaeological and stable isotopic analyses of human and faunal remains from the site. Stable isotope values and paleopathological data suggest significant maize consumption concurrent with increasing dental attrition. Considered alongside changes in food processing tools, this pattern suggests a culinary transition regarding maize use. Burial goods and associated features (including a ceremonial cache containing faunal remains, ceramics, and a musical instrument) shed light on mortuary practices. As some of Oaxaca's earliest known human remains, the burials of La Consentida offer a rare opportunity for multidisciplinary investigation of the diet, lifestyles, and mortuary traditions of an early Mesoamerican village.

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