Early public architecture in southern chile: archaeological and pedological results from the mocha island mounds-and-platform complex
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Campbell, Roberto
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Early public architecture in southern chile: archaeological and pedological results from the mocha island mounds-and-platform complex
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Public architecture emerged in conjunction with the development of early complex societies and is therefore a key feature for understanding them. Anthropogenic mounds and platforms in southern Chile dated to the Late Ceramic Period (AD 1000-1550), and historic indigenous inhabitants (AD 1550-present) are the southernmost manifestation of public architecture in the Americas. We report the results from excavation of an architectural complex on Mocha Island that covers an area of 9.2 ha and a volume of 43,000 m(3). This paper describes its construction dynamics, placing its origin at around AD 1000, a moment of significant sociopolitical and economic changes in southern Chile. We then associate information obtained from this site with similar complexes on mainland southern Chile to locate this phenomenon within a more regional comparative context.
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Consejo de Monumentos Nacionales 0248 NSF-BCS 0956229 FONDECYT 3130515 FONDECYT 11150397
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Latin American Antiquity Vol. 28 (4): 495-514
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