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Socioeconomic Networks and the Rise of Maya Civilization: The web of complexity at Middle Preclassic Cahal Pech, Belize
Sherman W. Horn III
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This study examines the origins of complex society in the Maya Lowlands during the Middle Preclassic period. Excavations at Cahal Pech - a mid-sized Maya settlement in the Belize River Valley - revealed complex architectural sequences over a 600-year developmental period, which spans the time of the earliest permanent villages in the area and the emergence of institutionalized hierarchy characteristic of later Maya civilization. The author uses spatial analysis to investigate artifact distribution patterns related to architectural change and marshals a diverse dataset to support a network framework for understanding developing complexity. This new theoretical framing expands on studies of long-distance exchange to examine how households and communities could gain advantage by participating in interaction networks, and how the positioning of some entities in networks could have produced socioeconomic inequalities that became entrenched through time.
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Title page
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Acknowledgements
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Contents
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List of Figures
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List of Tables
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Foreword
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Abstract
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1 Introduction
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A Brief Introduction to the Middle Preclassic in the Maya Lowlands
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Cahal Pech, Where We Lay Our Scene
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Methodological Framework
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Structure of this Monograph
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Objectives of this Research
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2 The Culture History of Preclassic Mesoamerican and History of Research at Cahal Pech
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Introduction
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Antecedents: Preceramic Mesoamerica and the Early Preclassic
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Paleoindian and Archaic
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The Early Formative outside the Maya Lowlands: 2000 – 900 B.C.
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The transition to the Middle Formative/Preclassic in Mesoamerica: 1100 – 900 B.C.
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The Middle Formative/Preclassic outside and inside the Maya Lowlands: 900 – 350 B.C.
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The Middle Formative outside the Maya Lowlands
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The Maya Lowlands during the Middle Preclassic
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Northern Lowlands
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Rio Pasión Drainage/Southern Petén
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Eastern/Central Petén and the Mirador Area
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Northern Belize
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The Belize Valley
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The Late Preclassic Consequences of Middle Preclassic Development
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Previous Investigations at Cahal Pech
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Early Investigations: Before 1988
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Excavations After 1988
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Cahal Pech Project: 1988-1991
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San Diego State University Excavations
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Belize Valley Archaeological Reconnaissance: 1992-present
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Belize Valley Preclassic Maya Project: 1994-1997
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3 Theoretical Approach and Small-World Networks
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Introduction
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Previous Models: Ecology vs. Agency, Regional vs. Local
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Ecological Approaches
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Power, Prestige, and Agent-based Approaches
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Interaction and Exchange in the Middle Preclassic Maya Lowlands
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What We Know
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What We Do Not Know and How We Think About Exchange and Interaction
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Middle Preclassic Social Organization as Nested Interaction Networks
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Households as Networks
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Communities as Networks
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Regions as Networks
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A Complex Web of Networks
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A Hypothetical Network Structure: The Small World and its Properties
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Networks and Social Identity
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Networks and Politics
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Summary
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4 Methods and Bridging Arguments
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Introduction
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Belize Valley Archaeological Project: 2004-2009
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Excavation and Recording Methods
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Excavations in Plaza B
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Artefact Processing and Preliminary BVAP Analyses
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Additional Fieldwork and Laboratory Analyses
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Remapping Plaza B and Creating the Cahal Pech Geodatabase
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Small Finds Analysis
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Pottery Analysis
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Architectural and Contextual Analysis
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Architectural Analysis
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Contextual Analysis
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Resource Zones and Consumption Variability: Conceptualizing Networks
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Resource Zones
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Investigating Variability
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Summary
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5 The Natural Environment and Resource Zones
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Introduction
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Modern Political Geography
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Regional Climate and Weather
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Landscape: Topography, Geology and Resource Zones
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Coastal and Offshore Zone
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Northern Karst and Plains Zone
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Southern Karst and Hills
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Maya Mountains
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Resource Areas outside Belize
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The Belize Valley Zone: Local Environment and Resources
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Landforms
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Geology
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Hydrology
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Soils
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Flora and Fauna
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Summary
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6 The Middle Preclassic Built Environment of Cahal Pech
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Introduction
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Overburden and Later Plaza Floors
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Late Preclassic Plaza Floors
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Plaza B Architectural Sequences
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Operation 1: Plaza B North Sequence
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Phase 0: Bedrock Modification and Soil Occupation Horizon (Cunil or Earlier?)
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Phase I: Marl Dwelling and Patio Floors and Cobble Surface (Transitional Cunil-early facet Kanluk)
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Phase II: Cobble and Marl Platform, Marl Patio Surface (early facet Kanluk)
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Phase III: Patio Floors and Small Cobble Platforms (early facet Kanluk)
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Phase IV: Large Cobble-and-Marl Platforms (early facet Kanluk-Kanluk)
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Phase V: Plaster Floor 4 (late facet Kanluk-early facet Xakal)
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Operation 1: Plaza B Central Sequence
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Phase 0: Bedrock Modification and Soil Occupation Horizon (Cunil or Earlier?)
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Phase I: Cobble surfaces (Transitional Cunil-early facet Kanluk)
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Phase IVb: Cobble feature and Plaster Floor 5 (early facet Kanluk -Kanluk)
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Phase V: Floor 4
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Operations 1 and 7: Plaza B South Sequence
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Phase 0: Bedrock modification and Occupation Horizon (Cunil or Earlier?)
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Phase I: Cobble surfaces, marl floors, and a plaster patch (Transitional Cunil-early facet Kanluk)
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Phase II: Soft and hard marl surfaces, raised marl platform (Transition Cunil-early facet Kanluk)
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Phase III: Cut stone rectangular platform and marl floors (early facet Kanluk)
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Phase IV: Cut stone rounded platform with plaster floor (early facet Kanluk-Kanluk)
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Phase V: Plaza Floor 4
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Operation 3
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Phase 0: Bedrock Modification and Occupation Horizon
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Phase I: Low plaster floors (Transitional Cunil-early facet Kanluk)
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Phase II: Eroded plaster floor (early facet Kanluk)
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Phase IV: Cut-stone platforms, marl floors, refuse pit (early facet Kanluk – late facet Kanluk)
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Phase V: Cobble surfaces, plaster floor (late facet Kanluk-early facet Xakal)
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Operation 4
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Phase IV: Limestone cobble platform (early facet Kanluk-Kanluk)
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Phase V: Plaster floor (late facet Kanluk-early facet Xakal)
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Operation 5
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Phase I: Stone alignment, carbon stains (Transitional Cunil-early facet Kanluk)
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Phase II: Marl surfaces (early facet Kanluk)
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Phase IV: Marl-and-flagstone surface, stone alignment (Kanluk-late facet Kanluk)
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Phase V: Plaster Floor 4 (late facet Kanluk-early facet Xakal)
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Summary of Plaza B Architectural Remains and Intrasite Comparisons
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Issues with Plaza B data comparison
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Phase 0 – Initial Occupation (Cunil or before)
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Phase I (Cunil-early facet Kanluk)
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Phase II (early facet Kanluk)
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Phase III (early facet Kanluk)
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Phase IV (early facet Kanluk – Kanluk)
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Phase V (transitional late facet Kanluk – early facet Xakal)
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Diachronic Developmental Trends
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Interpretations and Conclusions
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7 Objects of Stone
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Introduction
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Chipped Stone Artefacts
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Chert Artefacts
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Chert Summary
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Obsidian Artefacts
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Obsidian Sourcing
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Obsidian Summary and Comparison
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Ground, Pecked, and Polished Stone Artefacts
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Stone Spheroids
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Spheroid Comparison and Summary
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Grinding Equipment
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Grinding Equipment Comparison and Summary
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Slate Objects
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Slate Summary
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Green-coloured stone and Jadeite
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Green–Coloured Stone Summary
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Unworked Rocks and Minerals
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Stone Artefacts Summary
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8 Bone, Freshwater and Marine Shell Artefacts
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Introduction
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Objects of Worked Bone
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Comparative and Summary Comments
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Objects of Worked Freshwater Mollusc Shell
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Comparative and Summary Comments
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Objects of Marine Shell
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Taxonomic Identifications and the Distributions of Marine Molluscs
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Marine Shell Artefacts
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Marine Shell Ornaments
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Marine Shell Debris
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Evidence for the Production of Marine Shell Ornaments
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Summary and Conclusion
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9 Fired-Clay Artefacts and Pottery
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Introduction
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Modelled-Clay Artefacts
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Modelled-Clay Ocarinas and Figurines
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Head Fragments
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Torso Fragments
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Appendage Fragments
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Other Fragments
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Ocarina and Figurine Summary and Discussion
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Reworked Sherd Artefacts
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Summary: Modelled-Clay Artefacts and Reworked Sherds
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Pottery
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General Assemblage Composition
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Type-Variety Breakdown of the Assemblage
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Sherd Assemblage and Vessel Categories
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Cache Vessels
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Functional and Stylistic Groups by Phase
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Phase 0/I (Figure 9.9)
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Phase II/III (Figure 9.10)
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Phase IV (Figures 9.11 and 9.12)
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Macroscopic Fabric Characterization
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Fabric Characterization and Attributes
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Ceramic Fabrics by Phase
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Pottery Summary
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10 Spatial Analysis of Materials Consumption Patterns
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Introduction
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Definition of Consumption-Related Contexts/Consumer Groups
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Phase 0/I
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Phase II/III
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Phase IV
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Caveat
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Analysis of Materials Consumption and Structure Function by Phase
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Phase 0/I
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Materials Consumption
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Structure Function
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Phase II/III
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Materials Consumption
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Structure Function
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Phase IV
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Materials Consumption
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Phase IV Consumption Patterns
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Structure Function
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Intrasite Patterns, Interactions, and Social Organization – A Summary of Diachronic Change
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Phase 0/I – Cunil and transitional early Kanluk
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Phase II/III – early Kanluk
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Phase IV – transitional early/late Kanluk through late Kanluk
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The Alternative Addressed
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Summary Discussion
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11 Discussion of the Data from a Network Perspective
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Small World Networks and Brokers
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Early Small-World Networks
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Later Small-World Networks
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The Position of Cahal Pech in a Series of Middle Preclassic Small Worlds
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Community and Regional Small Worlds
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Cahal Pech as a Potential Broker
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Summary
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12 Conclusions
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A Summary of Network Interactions and Social Complexity
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Contributions to the Study of Middle Preclassic Maya Society
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Questions and Directions for Future Research
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Some Concluding Thoughts
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Appendix A Description of Excavations by Lot
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Appendix B Temporal Assessments of Sherd Lots
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Appendix C List of Caches and Burial
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Appendix D Descriptions of Ceramic Fabric Types
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References
Citable Link
Published: 2020
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781407357553 (ebook)
- 9781407357546 (paper)
BAR Number: S3009