Intensive survey of hilltop terrace sites in Oaxaca, Mexico.
FEINMAN, GARY M. ; NICHOLAS, LINDA M.
As part of a long-term project examining the Classic-Postclassic
(AD 200-1520) domestic economy in the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico, we have
completed intensive mapping and surface survey at three large, hilltop
terrace sites in eastern Tlacolula: Guirun (Saville 1900; 1909), El
Palmillo and the Mitla Fortress (Holmes 1897). Earlier surveys
(Kowalewski et al. 1989) indicated that all three sites were craft
production centres (stone working) and had extensive Classic and
Postclassic occupations (Feinman & Nicholas 1996).
Beginning in 1996, we undertook terrace-by-terrace surveys of each
site (Feinman & Nicholas 1997; 1998a; 1998b). All three were found
to have more terraces than we previously thought: 330 residential
terraces at Guirun, 1453 at El Palmillo and 463 at the Mitla Fortress.
Guirun is spread over a series of high piedmont ridges, with public
architecture on almost every flat ridgetop and discrete groups of
terraces on the descending slopes (FIGURE 1). In contrast, El Palmillo
and the fortress were more compact, with public architecture
concentrated at the apex of each site and terraces descending the lower
slopes. The El Palmillo occupation was especially dense, with row upon
row of terraces crammed on the main, west face of the site.
[FIGURE 1 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The Mitla Fortress had long been known for its huge defensive walls
(FIGURE 2); the recent fieldwork revealed that the other sites also were
extremely well defended. We mapped more than 50 defensive walls at
Guirun and well over 100 at El Palmillo and the fortress. A series of
walls guarded the most gradual approaches to all three sites. At El
Palmillo and the fortress narrow roads and accessways cut through both
systems of walls and strings of terraces. Generally, these paths were
flanked by small structures and platforms that could have monitored
movement in and out of the site (e.g. Hirth 1982: 323).
[FIGURE 2 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The intensive surveys provide a broad picture of the different
economic specializations (especially stone working and plant processing)
practised at each settlement. Stone tool processing and utilization were
more evident at these three sites than in most other parts of the valley
(Kowalewski et al. 1989; Robles 1994; Whalen 1986; Williams & Heizer
1965).
Distinctive scraping tools, raspadores (Hester & Heizer 1972;
Parsons & Parsons 1990), are present at all three sites. These tools
likely were used to process plants for fibre (e.g. Evans 1990), which
has been long proposed for the eastern Valley of Oaxaca (Hester &
Heizer 1972; Messer 1978: 77-80). We suspect that a variety of
xerophytic plants found on the sites today, including maguey and a
palm-like plant, Yucca periculosa, were cultivated by the inhabitants of
the ancient sites.
The more detailed information on site layout and economic
activities collected by intensive survey cannot be obtained during more
extensive regional surveys. The new work also is valuable for selecting
representative samples of well-preserved terraces for excavation (which
began in 1999 at El Palmillo), and for providing a more precise context
into which future excavation findings can be placed.
References
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Central Mexico during the Aztec Period, Latin American Antiquity 1:
117-32.
FEINMAN, G.M. & L.M. NICHOLAS. 1996. Defining the eastern
limits of the Monte Alban state: systematic settlement pattern survey in
the Guirun Area, Oaxaca, Mexico, Mexicon 18: 91-7. 1997. El mapa de
Guirun: produccion domestica en la frontera del estado zapoteco
prehispanico. Final field report of the 1996 season prepared for the
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GARY M. FEINMAN & LINDA M. NICHOLAS, Department of
Anthropology, The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago IL
60605-2496, USA.