Literature DB >> 17308820

Broken noses for the gods: ritual battles in the Atacama Desert during the Tiwanaku period.

Andrea Lessa1, Sheila Maria Ferraz Mendonça de Souza.   

Abstract

The sample consists of 226 skulls from the Atacameño cemetery of Coyo Oriente (639-910 AD), associated with the Tiwanaku period. The authors analyzed signs of acute trauma typically associated with violence, and the results were 12% of men and 9.9% of women displaying any type of lesion related to violence. In males, concentration of these non-lethal lesions in the nasal region (10.4%) as opposed to a random distribution over the entire skull (1.6%), suggests that the blows were struck during rituals. The cultural context of this period, with a strong ideological influence from Tiwanaku, supports the ritual hypothesis, since both the ethnographic as well as archeological records point to the existence of non-lethal violent bleeding with ritual beating to the face. Such rituals persist to this day among certain Andean populations. Among women, the most plausible hypothesis for the lesions (3.9% in the skull, 4.9% in the nasal bones, and 0.9% in the face) is domestic conflicts, since they show a random distribution. Previous studies with other Atacameño samples had indicated the same results for women.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17308820     DOI: 10.1590/s0074-02762006001000020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz        ISSN: 0074-0276            Impact factor:   2.743


  2 in total

1.  The spectacular human nose: an amplifier of individual quality?

Authors:  Se Kristine Rognmo Mikalsen; Ivar Folstad; Nigel Gilles Yoccoz; Bruno Laeng
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2014-04-17       Impact factor: 2.984

2.  Reconstructing the life of an unknown (ca. 500 years-old South American Inca) mummy--multidisciplinary study of a Peruvian Inca mummy suggests severe Chagas disease and ritual homicide.

Authors:  Stephanie Panzer; Oliver Peschel; Brigitte Haas-Gebhard; Beatrice E Bachmeier; Carsten M Pusch; Andreas G Nerlich
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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