2021
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0252051
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Temporal, spatial and gender-based dietary differences in middle period San Pedro de Atacama, Chile: A model-based approach

Abstract: To explore the possible emergence and lived consequences of social inequality in the Atacama, we analyzed a large set (n = 288) of incredibly well preserved and contextualized human skeletons from the broad Middle Period (AD 500–1000) of the San Pedro de Atacama (Chile) oases. In this work, we explore model-based paleodietary reconstruction of the results of stable isotope analysis of human bone collagen and hydroxyapatite. The results of this modeling are used to explore local phenomena, the nature of the Mid… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 95 publications
(150 reference statements)
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“…Archeological and bioarcheological evidence suggest that the Middle Period enmeshed the oases into a large social network that resulted in increased cultural exchange with foreign regions and growth and affluence for the oases. Importantly, however, the analyses of body activity presented here add to recent literature (Pestle, Hubbe, et al, 2021; Torres‐Rouff et al, 2018; Torres‐Rouff & Knudson, 2017) that demonstrates that Middle Period prosperity was not evenly distributed among the oases. The distribution of entheseal changes suggests that different individuals were engaged in long‐term activity patterns that varied by where they lived (or at least where they were buried) and, in a few instances, by their biological sex.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 57%
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“…Archeological and bioarcheological evidence suggest that the Middle Period enmeshed the oases into a large social network that resulted in increased cultural exchange with foreign regions and growth and affluence for the oases. Importantly, however, the analyses of body activity presented here add to recent literature (Pestle, Hubbe, et al, 2021; Torres‐Rouff et al, 2018; Torres‐Rouff & Knudson, 2017) that demonstrates that Middle Period prosperity was not evenly distributed among the oases. The distribution of entheseal changes suggests that different individuals were engaged in long‐term activity patterns that varied by where they lived (or at least where they were buried) and, in a few instances, by their biological sex.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Only the hip articulations show differences that can be explained by sex. This result is surprising, given that sex has been a meaningful factor of differentiation in previous analyses of diet composition (Pestle, Hubbe, et al, 2021), oral health (Hubbe et al, 2012), violence (Torres‐Rouff et al, 2018), and infection (Costa et al, 2009; Da‐Gloria et al, 2011; Marsteller et al, 2011). The lack of difference in entheseal changes does not necessarily imply that individuals of different sexes were engaged in similar physical activities (see discussion below) but instead supports the idea that the activities engaged in by men and women during the Middle Period had similar levels of physical impact on entheses development.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…While the modeled data from carbon and nitrogen isotopes provide a panorama of dietary choices and not details of change over the lifecourse, these data give a strong sense of individual‐ and group‐level differences and diet. Complete details on stable isotope analysis sampling, extraction, instrumentation, and modeling are presented in Pestle, Hubbe, et al ( 2021 ) and the paleodietary data discussed here are derived without modification from the data presented in that work. Nonetheless, below we provide a brief summary of the methods employed.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%