Heather McKillop. Salt: white gold of the ancient Maya.
Parsons, Jeffrey R.
xxii+223 pages, 114 figures, 30 tables. Gainesville (FL):
University Press of Florida; 0-8130-2511-7 hardback $55.
McKillop makes a convincing case that during Late Classic times
enough salt was being produced, by autonomous, specialised saltmakers in
her Punta Ycacas Lagoon study region and along neighbouring sections of
the Belize coast, to have supplied the needs of urbanised populations in
the adjacent interior lowlands. Prior to this study, most archaeologists
had concluded that these needs must have been supplied from workshops in
northern Yucatan where large quantities of salt could have been more
efficiently produced by solar evaporation.
McKillop successfully located and excavated three previously
unknown underwater saltmaking workshops situated up to 315 m from the
modern shoreline an d covered by water up to I m deep. These sites add a
significant new dimension to the archaeological study of Classic lowland
Mayan economy. A fourth, above-ground, site seems to represent a
water-side location where the salt content of sea water was increased by
leaching masses of saline soil.
The underwater sites, comprising compact layers, up to 10 cm thick,
of sherds and charcoal, are clearly places where the brine was boiled
and probably formed into hard salt cakes inside batches of poorly made
jars separated from one another by ceramic spacers and arranged on
cylindrical clay pedestals above wood-fuelled fires in large hearths. A
majority of the sherds belong to the jars used for boiling brine. Two
other common ceramic types, imported and of better quality, probably
functioned as storage containers for water and brine; a third, less
common type probably was used in saltmaking rituals.
A key finding of this study is that the ceramic assemblages in the
four excavated sites are significantly less diversified and more
standardised in size and form than a control sample from a nearby
domestic residential site. This is most notable in the case of the
dominant type of pottery associated with brine boiling. On this basis,
McKillop argues that the contents of the four excavated sites were
deposited in specialised saltmaking workshops where groups of
specialised saltmakers produced boiling jars and salt in localities
unmixed with other activities.
McKillop concludes that the salt needs of expanding Classic
populations in the southern Maya lowlands increased to the point where
salt from nearby Belize coastal sources became essential as large-scale
importation of salt from distant northern sources became increasingly
problematic. Rising sea levels may have caused a shift to brine boiling
during the Late Classic after the inundation of shoreline salt flats
where Early Classic saltmaking may have depended primarily on relatively
inefficient solar evaporation techniques. During the Late Classic,
Belizean coastal settlements like Wild Cane Cay became trading centres
that supplied the neighbouring interior populations with salt and other
marine products in exchange for goods manufactured by skilled inland
artisans.
This book is an important contribution. It demonstrates how careful
surface inspection (in difficult underwater and mangrove swamp
localities) can radically alter long-accepted perceptions. It
effectively challenges the predominant thinking that regarded
long-distance north south trade as the major source of salt for rapidly
developing Classic centres in the southern Maya lowlands. It provides
compelling evidence for rising sea levels during the Late Classic, and
equally compelling evidence that the resulting higher water was
compensated for through technological innovation for as long as it was
worthwhile to produce salt in the region. Specialised saltmaking along
the Belize coast was abandoned only in the face of declining population
and declining salt demand during the subsequent Postclassic.
I perceive the following points where additional attention should
eventually be focused. 1) The character of Early Classic saltmaking
remains uncertain, and so it is difficult to say very much about how the
Late Classic system described here originated and developed. 2) The
inferred degree of specialisation and socio-political autonomy remains
problematic. I am convinced that the four identified localities were
devoted exclusively to saltmaking, but I am less persuaded by the
available evidence that the saltmakers were themselves independent
specialists (whether part-time or full-time), or that they were
necessarily organised at a supracommunity level. 3) The author does not
look much beyond the Maya area for potentially useful comparative
insights into the technology and sociology of traditional saltmaking. 4)
The evidence for making salt into hard cakes remains overly dependent on
ethnographic analogy. 5) Although McKillop provides reasonable hints of
reciprocal exchange between salt-producing and salt-consuming areas,
such 'trade' needs to be more explicitly modeled. Does it
exclude tribute? Is it believed to correspond to marketplace exchange,
or something more appropriate to a command economy?
JEFFREY R. PARSONS
Museum of Anthropology, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan