| Literature DB >> 32055103 |
Andrzej Antczak1,2, Bernardo Urbani3, Maria Magdalena Antczak1,2.
Abstract
Moving back in time from the early colonial to the late pre-colonial period we evaluate the hypothesis asserting the migratory movement of Cariban-speaking groups from the Middle Orinoco River area towards north-central Venezuela. The explanation in vogue maintains that the migration followed fluvial routes and occurred between 1350 and 1150 BP (AD 600-800). We examine archaeological, linguistic, ethnohistorical, genetic, and ecological data seeking similarities between the Orinoco emigrants and their north-central Venezuelan descendants. As a result, we propose an alternative terrestrial/fluvial route and suggest these events occurred between 1150 and 1050 BP (AD 800-900). The route first proceeded upstream along rivers of the central llanos and later followed a natural terrestrial geomorphological corridor into the Lake Valencia Basin. We argue that, while future interdisciplinary (especially archaeo-linguistic and bioarchaeological) research is needed to further assess the results of these analyses, the Orinocan descendants in north-central Venezuela emerge as one of the most dynamic sociopolitical Cariban-speaking entities in all northeastern South America and the insular Caribbean on the eve of the European Conquest.Entities:
Keywords: Arauquinoid culture; Arawakan-speakers; Archaeo-linguistics; Cariban-speakers; Lowland South American archaeology; Valencioid culture; Venezuelan archaeology
Year: 2017 PMID: 32055103 PMCID: PMC6991969 DOI: 10.1007/s10963-017-9102-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J World Prehist ISSN: 0892-7537
Fig. 1Suggested migratory routes of the Carib-speakers with respect to the geomorphology and the topography of the macro-region
Late pre-colonial archaeological localities and findings in the valley of Caracas city
| # | Site | Material | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | La Yaguara | Pottery associated with the ‘societies of Arawakan-speaking potters and agriculturalists’ | Rivas ( |
| 2 | Montalbán | In 1968, a human skull was found; the remains were called ‘The Man from Caracas’ and dated to between 1000 and 2000 BP (IVIC-486) | Tamers ( |
| 3 | Hacienda La Vega | J. M. Cruxent and A. Singer found some pottery similar to the potsherds found in the Parque Central area | Villasana ( |
| 4 | La Vega | In 1888, Vicente Marcano reported two skulls from an altered cemetery and some human remains found inside ceramic vessels | Marcano ( |
| 5 | El Pinar | This is the site that gave its name to the El Pinar ceramic style of the Valencioid series | Cruxent and Rouse ( |
| 6 | Caracas city center | Mario Sanoja indicated at a conference held on June 16th, 2000 at the Museum of Natural Sciences of Caracas that some pre-colonial remains were recovered in the excavations carried out in the central part of Caracas | M. Sanoja (2000: Conference presentation) |
| 7 | Parque Central | A. Singer found Amerindian potsherds and carbonized particles in an excavation carried out during the second phase of the construction of the Central Park Buildings (Caldera, | Singer (2000, pers. comm.) |
| 8 | El Valle | Adolf Ernst reported an Amerindian cemetery from which he obtained ‘thirty objects in form of tooth’, possibly part of a necklace probably made from queen conch shell ( | Ernst ( |
| 9 | Santa Mónica | One funerary ceramic vessel was found with human bones inside | Navarrete et al. ( |
| 10 | Baruta | In 1888, Marcano reported carved ‘silex’ | Marcano ( |
| 11 | Las Mercedes - Valle Arriba | Reported presence of Amerindian ceramic material. Sherds from Calle Herrera Toro of Las Mercedes-Valle Arriba found by P. Jam | Jam ( |
| 12 | Silla de Caracas - Pico Oriental (El Ávila Nacional Park). | A. Jaimes reported pottery pertaining to the Valencioid series at the Silla de Caracas. A. Ernst indicated an unknown number of figurines (probably not more than five specimens) | A. Jaimes (1990, pers. comm. to F. Urbani); Jahn ( |
| 13 | El Cafetal (Colinas de Tamanaco) | Human bones (AD 1460) as well as an alleged pre-Hispanic gold object are reported | de Bellard Pietri ( |
| 14 | La Peñonera | J. M. Cruxent reported pottery similar to that recovered at Topo de Tacagua | Cruxent ( |
| 15 | La Lagunita | Reported carved ‘silex’ | Marcano ( |
| 16 | La Guairita (La Guairita Recreational Park) | Pre-colonial site with pottery | IPC ( |
| 17 | Iglesitas Cave | R. Hernández (2000, pers. comm.) found a skull and a canine tooth that J. M. Cruxent identified as pre-colonial | Urbani ( |
| 18 | Ricardo Zuloaga Cave | Reported the finding of a wooden stick possibly for hunting of oilbirds dated to 995 ± 75 BP (AD 1000), as well as a torch | Urbani ( |
| 19 | Cave of the Carraos or Las Guacas | Reported poles for oilbird hunting apparently associated with Amerindian pictographs | Urbani ( |
| 20 | Cave of the Figulina (southeast of Petare district) | J. M. Cruxent reported an anthropomorphic figurine near the Guaire River, Fila de Mariches | Cruxent ( |
| 21 | Gran Abrigo del Peñón de Lira | R. Hernández (2000, pers. comm.) reported many potsherds being found. Possibly this is the same site visited in 1948 by J. M. Cruxent and Colonel B. R. Lewis | Hernández (2000, pers. comm.), Cruxent and Rouse ( |
| 22 | Lira Cave | Reported pottery related to El Pinar style | Cruxent and Rouse ( |
| 23 | Requena Cave | R. Hernández (2000, pers. comm.) reported apparent human remains (femur, skull and tooth). This cave has been destroyed by a quarry | Urbani ( |
| 24 | Shelters and caves of the Peñón de Guanasna | Urbani ( | Barroeta Lara ( |
| 25 | La Botija Cave | Reported ceramic vessel classified as pertaining to the Valencioid series | Cruxent ( |
| 26 | Pico Naiguatá (El Ávila Nacional Park) | Potsherds, some of them red-slipped | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| 27 | El Paraíso | One female figurine with canoe-shaped head | Cruxent and Rouse ( |
| 28 | Asamblea Nacional (National Congress Building) | Spanish Maiolica associated with a Valencioid sherd | González-Jukisz (2015, pers. comm.) |
| 29 | Escuela de Música José Ángel Lamas | Trapezoid nephrite axe and jade pendant | Sanoja et al. ( |
| 30 | El Valle-Garzón | Axe found by Beld-Marstio in 1947 | La Salle ( |
| 31 | Valle Arriba | Conch and sherds found by Mathias-Brewer (1952) and Ruz-Brewer (1953) | La Salle ( |
| 32 | Downtown Caracas | Cylindrical clay body stamps ( | Sanoja and Vargas-Arenas ( |
| 33 | Chancellery Building | Presence of apparent Valencioid sherds | Linero-Baroni ( |
The numbers in the first column correspond to the numbers in Fig. 2 (see also Fig. 3)
Fig. 4Suggested migratory routes of the Carib-speakers with respect to the distribution of the indigenous languages of the Venezuelan macro-region at the time of European contact (redrawn after Durbin 1977)
Radiocarbon, fluoride, and thermoluminescence dates (uncalibrated) from archaeological sites in north-central Venezuela associated with the Valencioid series
| Site/excavation unit | Sample code/lab | Sample type/context/depth (cm) | Uncalibrated BP | AD | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Los Cerritos, eastern shore of Lake Valencia | Geochron Lab. Inc. | Human bones; 80 cm | 1025 ± 115 | 925 | Peñalver ( |
| La Mata, eastern shore of Lake Valencia | Y-630 | Artificial earthen mound | 1000 ± 70 | 920 | Rouse and Cruxent ( |
| La Mata, eastern shore of Lake Valencia | Y-632 | Artificial earthen mound | 1000 ± 100 | 920 | Rouse and Cruxent ( |
| La Mata, eastern shore of Lake Valencia | Y-631 | Artificial earthen mound | 980 ± 110 | 940 | Rouse and Cruxent ( |
| Valle de Chuao, central-western Caribbean coasta | IVIC | Pottery (?) | 744 ± 98 | 1206 | Morales ( |
| Ricardo Zuloaga Cave | Geochron Lab. Inc. | Wooden stick | 995 ± 75 | 955 | Urbani ( |
| Caracas, ‘Man of Caracas’b | IVIC-486 | Human bones | 1000–2000 | 0–1000 | Tamers ( Anonymous ( |
| El Cafetal, Caracas Valleyc | Teledyne Isotopes | Human bones | 490 ± 75 | 1460 | de Bellard-Pietri ( |
|
| |||||
| Cayo Sal Island, CS/D/1c | I-16,287 | Hearth; 35 cm | 750 ± 100 | 1200 | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| Cayo Sal Island, CS/P6 | Beta-209967 | Shelle | 1150 ± 60 | 1160–1390d | Antczak et al. ( |
| Cayo Sal Island, CS/P1 | Beta-209968 | Shelle | 1070 ± 60 | 1270–1440d | Antczak et al. ( |
| Cayo Sal Island, CS/D/2 | Beta-176597 | Shelle | 870 ± 60 | 1410–1500d | Antczak et al. ( |
| Dos Mosquises Island, DM/A/C/10c | I-15,087 | Hearth; 45–47 cm | 470 ± 80 | 1480 | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| Dos Mosquises Island, A/B/9c | I-16,294 | Hearth; 38 cm | 490 ± 80 | 1460 | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| Dos Mosquises Island, DM/A/C/11c | I-15,088 | Hearth; 38 cm | 520 ± 80 | 1430 | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| Dos Mosquises Island, DM/A/1Kc | I-16,279 | Hearth; 43–49 cm | 680 ± 80 | 1270 | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| Dos Mosquises Island, DM/CN/1c | Beta-176599 | Shelle | 560 ± 60 | 1290–1440d | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| Dos Mosquises Island, DM/CN1Bc | Beta-176599 | Shelle | 1120 ± 50 | 1200–1340d | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| La Pelona, PL/CN/4c | Beta-178239 | Shelle | 1150 ± 60 | 1160–1330d | Antczak et al. ( |
| La Pelona, PL/CN/3c | Beta-176600 | Shelle | 1070 ± 60 | 1230–1420d | Antczak et al. ( |
| La Pelona, PL/CN/1 | Beta-176601 | Shelle | 870 ± 60 | 1390–1540d | Antczak et al. ( |
| Isla Larga, IL/A1c | Beta-206746 | Shelle | 1060 ± 60 | 1240–1420d | Antczak and Antczak ( |
| La Orchila Island, OR/F/A/6c | I-16,323 | Hearth; 63 cm | 580 ± 80 | 1370 | Antczak and Antczak ( |
All are radiocarbon dates unless otherwise indicated: a Thermoluminescence or b fluoride. c Samples taken from Valencioid deposits; the remaining island samples shown in the table come from shell midden layers without culturally attributable materials. d Dates cal to 2σ Sigma. e Only Lobatus gigas shells with circular human-made perforation in their spires (this means that the animals were ‘killed’ by humans) were used as samples. Note that the codes of excavation units used here are those stated in the laboratory references
Fig. 2Locations of the late pre-colonial archaeological sites in the valley of Caracas city (the locations are approximate and do not include sites with petroglyphs). Numbers in this figure correspond to the numbers of the first column of Table 2. Base map, Dirección de Cartografía Nacional 1.100.000, sheet 6847. Base image, Google Earth™ © 2015 CNES/Astrium
Fig. 3a Anthropomorphic figurine found near Guaire River in Fila de Mariches (Cruxent 1964; Table 2, #20); b possible torch from Ricardo Zuloaga Cave (Urbani 1998a, b; Urbani 2000b, 2009; Table 2, #18); c ‘tooth’ from the necklace of queen conch found at El Valle (Ernst 1872; Table 2, #8); d rock paintings from Los Carraos/Las Guacas Cave (Urbani 2000b, 2009); e in situ complete vessel from Peñón de Guanasna (Urbani 2000b, 2009; Table 2, #24) (graphic scale: 1 square = 1 × 1 cm). Images reproduced with permission from the Centro de Antropología, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas and the Departamento de Antropoespeleología, Sociedad Venezolana de Espeleología
Fig. 5Suggested migratory routes of the Carib-speakers with respect to ecological zones of the macro-region (redrawn after Huber and Alarcón 1988)