Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México

The Bolaños culture is made up of many human communities that established in one of the western Sierra Madre canyons, Mexico. Their occupations are chronologically dated between 100 years BC and 1260 years AD, and extended from southern Zacatecas to the mouth of the Rio Grande of Santiago, in the ce...

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Autores principales: Rodríguez Galicia, Bernardo, Valadez Azúa, Raúl, Cabrero García, María Teresa
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología 2012
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/9140
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spelling I10-R372-article-91402024-11-04T18:06:51Z Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México Arqueofauna del sitio El Piñón, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco, México Rodríguez Galicia, Bernardo Valadez Azúa, Raúl Cabrero García, María Teresa Bolaños Canon “El Piñón” shaft tombs specimen Cañón de Bolaños “El Piñón” Tumbas de tiro Huesos largos The Bolaños culture is made up of many human communities that established in one of the western Sierra Madre canyons, Mexico. Their occupations are chronologically dated between 100 years BC and 1260 years AD, and extended from southern Zacatecas to the mouth of the Rio Grande of Santiago, in the center of Jalisco, Mexico. The basis of their development was the exchange of artifacts for products and raw material that didn’t exist in the western Mexican region. Here, the archaeozoological study performed with the bone remains recovered in excavations from the “El Piñon” archaeological site is presented. Corresponding interpretations allowed to reconstruct the natural and cultural environment. The identified fauna consisted, in a preliminary analysis, consists of 3333 specimens. More than 250 individuals were identified from cremated, burnt or worked bone and teeth, including: rabbit, hears, squirrel, mole, dog, mountain lion, lynx, peccary, deer, turkey, duck, quail, green macaw, among other vertebrates that are common in the semidry-mild weather that prevails in the Zacatecas-Jalisco region. La cultura Bolaños comprende diversas comunidades humanas que se asentaron en uno de los cañones que forman la Sierra Madre Occidental y se ubica, cronológicamente, entre el año 100 a.C. y llega al 1260 de nuestra era, extendiéndose desde el sur de Zacatecas hasta llegar a la desembocadura del río Grande de Santiago, en el centro de Jalisco, México. La base de su desarrollo fue el intercambio de artefactos por productos y materias primas que no existían en la región del occidente mexicano. Aquí el estudio arqueozoológico realizado con las colecciones de restos óseos obtenidos de las excavaciones efectuadas en el sitio arqueológico “El Piñón”, y su correspondiente interpretación, permitió reconstruir tanto el ambiente natural como el cultural suscitado en el pasado. La fauna identificada consistió, en un primer análisis preliminar, en poco más de 3333 especímenes óseos, entre huesos y dientes no modificados, y alterados por cocción, cremación o trabajados, los cuales correspondieron a más de 250 individuos, entre los que se pueden mencionar: conejos, liebres, ardillas, tuzas (topos), perros, pumas, linces, pecaríes, venados, guajolotes (pavos), patos, codornices y guacamayas verdes, entre otros vertebrados que son comunes al ambiente semiseco-templado que prevalece en la región de Zacatecas-Jalisco. Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología 2012-11-21 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Investigación básica; basic investigation application/pdf https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/9140 10.31048/1852.4826.v5.n1.9140 Revista del Museo de Antropología; Vol. 5 No. 1 (2012); 203-212 Revista del Museo de Antropología; Vol. 5 Núm. 1 (2012); 203-212 Revista del Museo de Antropología; v. 5 n. 1 (2012); 203-212 1852-4826 1852-060X 10.31048/1852.4826.v5.n1 spa https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/9140/9894 Derechos de autor 2012 Bernardo Rodríguez Galicia, Raúl Valadez Azúa, María Teresa Cabrero García
institution Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
institution_str I-10
repository_str R-372
container_title_str Revista del Museo de Antropología
language Español
format Artículo revista
topic Bolaños Canon
“El Piñón”
shaft tombs
specimen
Cañón de Bolaños
“El Piñón”
Tumbas de tiro
Huesos largos
spellingShingle Bolaños Canon
“El Piñón”
shaft tombs
specimen
Cañón de Bolaños
“El Piñón”
Tumbas de tiro
Huesos largos
Rodríguez Galicia, Bernardo
Valadez Azúa, Raúl
Cabrero García, María Teresa
Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México
topic_facet Bolaños Canon
“El Piñón”
shaft tombs
specimen
Cañón de Bolaños
“El Piñón”
Tumbas de tiro
Huesos largos
author Rodríguez Galicia, Bernardo
Valadez Azúa, Raúl
Cabrero García, María Teresa
author_facet Rodríguez Galicia, Bernardo
Valadez Azúa, Raúl
Cabrero García, María Teresa
author_sort Rodríguez Galicia, Bernardo
title Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México
title_short Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México
title_full Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México
title_fullStr Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México
title_full_unstemmed Archaeofauna of the archaeological site “El Piñón”, Cultura Bolaños, Jalisco México
title_sort archaeofauna of the archaeological site “el piñón”, cultura bolaños, jalisco méxico
description The Bolaños culture is made up of many human communities that established in one of the western Sierra Madre canyons, Mexico. Their occupations are chronologically dated between 100 years BC and 1260 years AD, and extended from southern Zacatecas to the mouth of the Rio Grande of Santiago, in the center of Jalisco, Mexico. The basis of their development was the exchange of artifacts for products and raw material that didn’t exist in the western Mexican region. Here, the archaeozoological study performed with the bone remains recovered in excavations from the “El Piñon” archaeological site is presented. Corresponding interpretations allowed to reconstruct the natural and cultural environment. The identified fauna consisted, in a preliminary analysis, consists of 3333 specimens. More than 250 individuals were identified from cremated, burnt or worked bone and teeth, including: rabbit, hears, squirrel, mole, dog, mountain lion, lynx, peccary, deer, turkey, duck, quail, green macaw, among other vertebrates that are common in the semidry-mild weather that prevails in the Zacatecas-Jalisco region.
publisher Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología
publishDate 2012
url https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/9140
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