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首页> 外文期刊>Quaternary International >Modeling cultural responses to volcanic disaster in the ancient Jama-Coaque tradition, coastal Ecuador: A case study in cultural collapse and social resilience
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Modeling cultural responses to volcanic disaster in the ancient Jama-Coaque tradition, coastal Ecuador: A case study in cultural collapse and social resilience

机译:厄瓜多尔沿海的古代贾玛·科克传统对火山灾害的文化反应建模:以文化崩溃和社会适应力为例

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摘要

The cultural impacts of catastrophic Late Pleistocene and Holocene volcanism are characteristically variable throughout the world due to a wide range of factors such as magnitude of the eruptive event, proximity to the eruption, the geographic and ecological settings of the eruptive footprint, and relative social and political complexity of the societies affected. The reasons why one society succumbs to a volcanic disaster while another may recover are complex and not subject to invariant laws. Likewise, even in cases where recovery is possible, different pathways may be followed depending on a host of contingent factors. In archaeological cases, it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between cultural developments that may be caused by volcanic disasters and those that are merely coincidental with these events, but not all volcanic eruptions lead to cultural collapse. Archaeological research in the Jama Valley of coastal Ecuador has revealed evidence of three volcanic eruptions emanating from the northern Ecuadorian highlands some 200 km to the east, all three of which represent major stratigraphic breaks in the regional archaeological record. The third of these volcanic events, now thought to have occurred at similar to 90 AD, significantly affected the Muchique Phase 1 chiefdoms of the Jama-Coaque tradition that occupied much of northern Manabi province. And like the first two eruptive events in the Formative Period that led to centuries-long valley abandonment, this eruption also resulted in valley abandonment for several centuries. But it also ushered in a new ceramic phase (Muchique Phase 2) of the Jama-Coaque tradition, and a notable change in settlement hierarchy, ceramic figural sculpture, evidence for warfare, agricultural intensification and diversification, surplus storage facilities, and new forms of political complexity and chiefly authority. This paper offers a model of differential human response to catastrophic volcanism that focuses attention on human-resource imbalances resulting from such events and identifies a series of contingent circumstances in which complex chiefdoms may cope, and even flourish, in the aftermath of disaster. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.
机译:灾难性的晚更新世和全新世火山的文化影响在全球范围内具有特征性的变化,这是由于多种因素造成的,例如爆发事件的规模,与爆发的接近程度,爆发足迹的地理和生态环境以及相对的社会和社会因素。受影响社会的政治复杂性。一个社会屈服于火山灾害而另一个社会可能恢复的原因很复杂,不受法律约束。同样,即使在可能进行恢复的情况下,根据一系列或有因素,也可能遵循不同的途径。在考古案例中,有时很难区分可能由火山灾害引起的文化发展和仅与这些事件同时发生的文化发展,但是并非所有火山喷发都会导致文化崩溃。厄瓜多尔沿海地区贾马河谷的考古研究表明,有证据表明厄瓜多尔北部高地向东约200公里处喷发了三处火山喷发,这三处火山喷发均代表了该地区考古记录中的重大地层破裂。这些火山事件中的第三次,现在被认为发生在公元90年左右,严重影响了占马纳比北部大部分地区的贾马-科阿克传统的穆奇克第一阶段酋长。就像形成时期的前两次爆发事件导致长达数百个世纪的山谷被遗弃一样,这种喷发也导致山谷被遗弃了几个世纪。但它也迎来了Jama-Coaque传统的新陶瓷阶段(Muchique阶段2),定居等级,陶瓷雕像雕塑,战争证据,农业集约化和多样化,过剩的存储设施以及新形式的政治复杂性和主要是权威。本文提供了一种人类对灾难性火山反应的不同反应模型,该模型将注意力集中在此类事件造成的人力资源不平衡上,并确定了一系列偶发情况,在灾难之后,复杂的酋长国可能应付甚至繁荣。 (C)2015 Elsevier Ltd和INQUA。版权所有。

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