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Open sepulchers and closed boundaries? Biodistance analysis of cemetery structure and postmarital residence in the late prehispanic Andes
Author(s) -
Velasco Matthew C.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
american journal of physical anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.146
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1096-8644
pISSN - 0002-9483
DOI - 10.1002/ajpa.23594
Subject(s) - biosocial theory , residence , demography , geography , statistic , bioarchaeology , biology , sociology , statistics , archaeology , psychology , mathematics , social psychology , personality
Objectives In the Late Intermediate Period Andes (AD 1100–1450), the proliferation of above‐ground sepulchers reconfigured social boundaries within and between communities engaged in protracted conflict. However, the biosocial dimensions of these mortuary practices, and their implications for conflict and alliance formation, remain unexplored. This study examines patterns of phenotypic variation to: (1) evaluate if open sepulchers were organized on the basis of biological relatedness, and (2) explore if sex‐specific phenotypic variability conforms to models of postmarital residence. Materials and methods Cranial nonmetric traits were recorded in five skeletal samples from two cemeteries in the Colca Valley, Peru. Biological distances between burial groups were calculated using the Mean Measure of Divergence (MMD) statistic. Postmarital residence was explored by calculating and bootstrapping the ratio of male‐to‐female mean pairwise differences (MPD) at the within‐group level. Results The MMD analysis yields greater than expected between‐group distances for burial groups with a minimum sample size of 20 individuals. In contrast, a prevailing pattern of sex‐specific, within‐group phenotypic variability is not apparent from the analysis of MPD. The use of 12 or 24 dichotomous traits produces similar results. Discussion Greater than expected biological distances suggest that above‐ground mortuary practices reinforced biosocial boundaries between corporate household groups. Intracemetery heterogeneity persisted even as cranial vault modification, a correlate of social identity, became more homogenous, revealing how corporate group organization was negotiated at multiple scales. Sex‐specific variation does not conform to traditional migration models. If migration occurred, it did not have a homogenizing effect on phenotypic variation. These results should be viewed with caution in light of the smaller sample sizes of sex‐specific groupings.