Title
Economic, Social, and Ritual Aspects of Copper Mining in Ancient Peru: An Upper Ica Valley Case Study
Date Issued
01 January 2013
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
book part
Author(s)
Arqueocare
Publisher(s)
Springer Nature
Abstract
We use survey data on ancient mining obtained from the upper Ica valley in southern Peru to examine the complex and rich relationships that ancient Andean people maintained with the landscape and the resources it yielded. In particular, we provide a preliminary evaluation of archaeological contexts that illustrate historically and ethnohistorically documented mining practices and attitudes toward the mining landscape. The results of this study indicate that mining in the Andean past was embedded in ontologies where economics, status, ritual responsibilities, and relationships of reciprocity between people and landscape intersected. The archaeological data show that mining of copper and copper-bearing minerals, while practiced for some 2 millennia in the region, became increasingly important and formal in the Late Intermediate Period, when new strategies for the legitimization of inequalities were adopted. These included the ownership and exchange of metal items, the control of their production, and the sponsorship of rituals that accompanied the extraction of minerals from the Andes. Since the mountains have long been understood to be the seat of powerful supernatural beings that interceded in human affairs in ways that depended on human actions, we emphasize that the removal of matter from these mountains was a momentous act, and that palliating its potential consequences was rewarded with great prestige.
Start page
275
End page
298
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
MineralogĂa
MinerĂa, Procesamiento de minerales
Temas sociales
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84918826938
Source
Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology
ISSN of the container
15682722
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgments We extend gratitude to the National Geographic Society for funding this phase of a wider program initiated by K.J. Vaughn. We are also grateful of the various forms of assistance and support we received from Ruben Gracia Soto and Susana Arce Torres from Ica’s regional Museum and Peru’s Ministry of Culture, and logistic help from Henry Vladimir Falcon. We also thank the anonymous reviewer who took the time to carefully review this early draft of this chapter and offer helpful and valuable suggestions.
Sources of information:
Directorio de ProducciĂłn CientĂfica
Scopus