TY - JOUR
T1 - Quinoa, potatoes, and llamas fueled emergent social complexity in the Lake Titicaca basin of the Andes
AU - Miller, Melanie J.
AU - Kendall, Iain
AU - Capriles, Jose M.
AU - Bruno, Maria C.
AU - Evershed, Richard P.
AU - Hastorf, Christine A.
N1 - Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. We wish to thank the communities of Chiripa, San José, Santa Rosa, and Coacollo; the Gobierno Autónomo Municipal de Taraco, the Gobierno Autónomo Departamental de La Paz, and the Bolivian Ministry of Cultures Unit for Archaeology and Museums; and the members of the Taraco Archaeological Project. Additionally, we thank Todd Dawson, Stefania Mambelli, Wenbo Yang, and Paul Brooks of the Center for Stable Isotope Biogeochemistry at the University of California, Berkeley. Funding support was provided by the NSF (NSF BNS/DBS 8451369; NSF BCS 0631282; NSF BCS 0234011; NSF BCS 1920904), National Geographic Society, and European Association for Organic Geochemists 2018 Research Award. The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) (Reference: CC010) and The National Environmental Isotope Facility (NEIF) (www.isotopesuk.org) are thanked for funding and maintenance of the GC-C-IRMS instruments used for this work.
Funding Information:
We wish to thank the communities of Chiripa, San Jose, Santa Rosa, and Coacollo; the Gobierno Autonomo Municipal de Taraco, the Gobierno Autonomo Departamental de La Paz, and the Bolivian Ministry of Cultures Unit for Archaeology and Museums; and the members of the Taraco Archaeological Project. Additionally, we thank Todd Dawson, Stefania Mambelli, Wenbo Yang, and Paul Brooks of the Center for Stable Isotope Biogeochemistry at the University of California, Berkeley. Funding support was provided by the NSF (NSF BNS/DBS 8451369; NSF BCS 0631282; NSF BCS 0234011; NSF BCS 1920904), National Geographic Society, and European Association for Organic Geochemists 2018 Research Award. The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) (Reference: CC010) and The National Environmental Isotope Facility (NEIF) (www.isotopesuk.org) are thanked for funding and maintenance of the GC-C-IRMS instruments used for this work.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/12/7
Y1 - 2021/12/7
N2 - The Lake Titicaca basin was one of the major centers for cultural development in the ancient world. This lacustrine environment is unique in the high, dry Andean altiplano, and its aquatic and terrestrial resources are thought to have contributed to the florescence of complex societies in this region. Nevertheless, it remains unclear to what extent local aquatic resources, particularly fish, and the introduced crop, maize, which can be grown in regions along the lakeshores, contributed to facilitating sustained food production and population growth, which underpinned increasing social political complexity starting in the Formative Period (1400 BCE to 500 CE) and culminating with the Tiwanaku state (500 to 1100 CE). Here, we present direct dietary evidence from stable isotope analysis of human skeletal remains spanning over two millennia, together with faunal and floral reference materials, to reconstruct foodways and ecological interactions in southern Lake Titicaca over time. Bulk stable isotope analysis, coupled with compound-specific amino acid stable isotope analysis, allows better discrimination between resources consumed across aquatic and terrestrial environments. Together, this evidence demonstrates that human diets predominantly relied on C3 plants, particularly quinoa and tubers, along with terrestrial animals, notably domestic camelids. Surprisingly, fish were not a significant source of animal protein, but a slight increase in C4 plant consumption verifies the increasing importance of maize in the Middle Horizon. These results underscore the primary role of local terrestrial food resources in securing a nutritious diet that allowed for sustained population growth, even in the face of documented climate and political change across these periods.
AB - The Lake Titicaca basin was one of the major centers for cultural development in the ancient world. This lacustrine environment is unique in the high, dry Andean altiplano, and its aquatic and terrestrial resources are thought to have contributed to the florescence of complex societies in this region. Nevertheless, it remains unclear to what extent local aquatic resources, particularly fish, and the introduced crop, maize, which can be grown in regions along the lakeshores, contributed to facilitating sustained food production and population growth, which underpinned increasing social political complexity starting in the Formative Period (1400 BCE to 500 CE) and culminating with the Tiwanaku state (500 to 1100 CE). Here, we present direct dietary evidence from stable isotope analysis of human skeletal remains spanning over two millennia, together with faunal and floral reference materials, to reconstruct foodways and ecological interactions in southern Lake Titicaca over time. Bulk stable isotope analysis, coupled with compound-specific amino acid stable isotope analysis, allows better discrimination between resources consumed across aquatic and terrestrial environments. Together, this evidence demonstrates that human diets predominantly relied on C3 plants, particularly quinoa and tubers, along with terrestrial animals, notably domestic camelids. Surprisingly, fish were not a significant source of animal protein, but a slight increase in C4 plant consumption verifies the increasing importance of maize in the Middle Horizon. These results underscore the primary role of local terrestrial food resources in securing a nutritious diet that allowed for sustained population growth, even in the face of documented climate and political change across these periods.
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U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2113395118
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2113395118
M3 - Article
C2 - 34845028
AN - SCOPUS:85120784656
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 118
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 49
M1 - e2113395118
ER -