Dyes used in pre-Hispanic textiles from the Middle and Late Intermediate periods of San Pedro de Atacama (northern Chile): new insights into patterns of exchange and mobility
Author
dc.contributor.author
Niemeyer Marich, August
Author
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Agüero, Carolina
Admission date
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2015-08-21T18:05:34Z
Available date
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2015-08-21T18:05:34Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Archaeological Science 57 (2015) 14-23
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2015.02.003
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/133000
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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Pre-Hispanic Andean textiles constitute the longest continuous textile record in the world, their structure
and design being one of the most significant markers of group identity in Andean populations. Since the
Late Formative Period (ca. 100e400 AD), the region around San Pedro de Atacama (SPA) in the Atacama
desert of northern Chile has been part of a complex and extensive network of interacting polities through
which raw materials, agricultural products, goods, people and ideas circulated in the South-Central
Andes. The archaeological record in SPA abounds with textiles from various cultures that participated
in such network. A study of these textiles would allow intercultural as well as diachronical comparisons.
Numerous studies on textiles found in SPA have focused on their technological and iconographic features.
This work addresses the identification of the organic dyes employed in the manufacture of 38 textiles
found in funerary contexts in SPA from the Middle (ca. 400e1000 A.D.) and the Late Intermediate periods
(ca. 1000e1450 A.D.), using high performance liquid chromatography with a diode array detector (HPLCDAD).
Purpurin and not alizarin was found in all red dyed fibers and indigotin (IND) and indirubin (INR)
in all blue dyed fibers. Natural sources of these dyes are exogenous to SPA; their importation into SPA
lasted for nearly a millennium. A positive correlation was found between [IND]/[INR] concentration ratio
and the altitude of the place where the fiber was presumably dyed. Overall, the results indicate that
finished garments and also raw dyes and ready-to-use dyed fibers were imported into SPA from
neighboring regions and that foreign weavers were possibly active at SPA.
Dyes used in pre-Hispanic textiles from the Middle and Late Intermediate periods of San Pedro de Atacama (northern Chile): new insights into patterns of exchange and mobility