Marajoara culture

The Marajoara or Marajó culture was a pre-Columbian era society that flourished on Marajó island at the mouth of the Amazon River. In a survey, Charles C. Mann suggests the culture appeared to flourish between 800 AD and 1400 AD, based on archeological studies.[1] Researchers have documented that there was human activity at these sites as early as 1000 BCE. The culture seems to have persisted into the colonial era.[2]

Background

Archeologists have found sophisticated pottery in their excavations on the island. These pieces are large, and elaborately painted and incised with representations of plants and animals. These provided the first evidence that a complex society had existed on Marajó. Evidence of mound building further suggests that well-populated, complex and sophisticated settlements developed on this island, as only such settlements were believed capable of such extended projects as major earthworks.[3]

The extent, level of complexity, and resource interactions of the Marajoara culture have been disputed. Working in the 1950s in some of her earliest research, American Betty Meggers suggested that the society migrated from the Andes and settled on the island. Many researchers believed that the Andes were populated by Paleoindian migrants from North America who gradually moved south after being hunters on the plains.

In the 1980s, another American archeologist, Anna Curtenius Roosevelt, led excavations and geophysical surveys of the mound Teso dos Bichos. She concluded that the society that constructed the mounds originated on the island itself.[4]

The pre-Columbian culture of Marajó may have developed social stratification and supported a population as large as 100,000 people.[1] The Native Americans of the Amazon rain forest may have used their method of developing and working in Terra preta to make the land suitable for the large-scale agriculture needed to support large populations and complex social formations such as chiefdoms.[1]

Origin of the mounds

Rossetti et al proposed that the archaeological settlements associated with isolated or compound mounds were "systematically developed on top of extensive elevated surfaces formed due to natural sedimentary processes".[5]

Thus, the large Marajoara mounds or tesos are not entirely manmade. Rather, the inhabitants took advantage of the natural, preexisting elevated surfaces and added on top of those to build their earthworks. This interpretation suggests less cumulative labor investment in the construction of the mounds.

"Several mounds on Marajo Island and several in Bolivia have yielded radiocarbon dates as early as 1000 to 300 BC in early levels, suggesting that the first mounds of the tradition were built in the Formative, the period when horticulture appears to become widespread for the first time."[6]

The earliest phase of human activity on Marajo Island is known as the 'Ananatuba phase'.

Agriculture and economy

Architecture

Artifacts

Funerary urn, Collection H. Law
Vase, Collection H. Law

Leadership and inequality

Religion and ideology

Death

The skeletal remains preserve very well in burial urns, which were covered with a clayey soil ** (Roosevelt 1991: 426).

Warfare and violence

Writing, art, and symbolism

The end

Ceramics

Travelers in the 1800s noted both the presence of mounds and the beauty of the ceramics found inside them or exposed on their sides.[7] Museums in Europe and the United States began to collect some of the larger and more beautiful pieces, the largest of which are funerary urns. Buried in house floors constructed on the tops of the mounds, the elaborately decorated urns contain the remains of significant individuals. When the individuals died, the flesh was cleared from their bones and the remains were placed in the urns, which were then topped with a bowl or platter.[8]

In addition to the urns, ceramic artifacts include plates, bowls, vases, and tangas (female pubic coverings).

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Mann, Charles C. (2006) [2005]. 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. Vintage Books. pp. 326–333. ISBN 1-4000-3205-9.
  2. Schaan, Denise. "Current Research". Marajó Island Archaeology and Precolonial History. Marajoara.com. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
  3. Grann, David (2009). The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon. p. 315. ISBN 978-0-385-51353-1.
  4. Roosevelt, Anna C. (1991). Moundbuilders of the Amazon: Geophysical Archaeology on Marajó Island, Brazil. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-125-95348-1.
  5. Dilce de Fátima Rossetti, Ana Maria Góes, Peter Mann de Toledo (2008), "Archaeological Mounds in Marajó Island in Northern Brazil: A Geological Perspective Integrating Remote Sensing and Sedimentology." (PDF) GEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, VOL. 24, NO. 1
  6. Neil Asher Silberman, Alexander A. Bauer, The Oxford Companion to Archaeology. Oxford University Press, 2012 ISBN 0199735786
  7. 1 2 Derby, Orville A. (Apr 1879). "The Artificial Mounds of the Island of Marajo, Brazil". The American Naturalist. University of Chicago Press for The American Society of Naturalists. 13 (4): 224–229. doi:10.1086/272316. JSTOR 2449810.
  8. 1 2 Schaan, Denise (2009). Marajó: Arqueologia, Iconografia, História e Patrimônio. Textos Selecionados. p. 59.

Bibliography

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