Title
Quebrada Jaguay: Early South American maritime adaptations
Date Issued
18 September 1998
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Sandweiss D.H.
McInnis H.
Burger R.L.
Ojeda B.
Paredes R.
Sandweiss M.D.C.
Glascock M.D.
Abstract
Excavations at Quebrada Jaguay 280 (QJ-280) (16°30'S) in south coastal Peru demonstrated that Paleoindian-age people of the Terminal Pleistocene (about 11,100 to 10,000 carbon-14 years before the present or about 13,000 to 11,000 calibrated years before the present) in South America relied on marine resources while resident on the coast, which extends the South American record of maritime exploitation by a millennium. This site supports recent evidence that Paleoindian-age people had diverse subsistence systems. The presence of obsidian at QJ-280 shows that the inhabitants had contact with the adjacent Andean highlands during the Terminal Pleistocene.
Start page
1830
End page
1832
Volume
281
Issue
5384
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Historia, ArqueologÃa
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0032544315
PubMed ID
Source
Science
ISSN of the container
00368075
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción CientÃfica
Scopus