Bioarchaeology & an Early Death Cult in the Bolivian Andes Catherine Domanska · John W. Janusek Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University Introduction.

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Bioarchaeology & an Early Death Cult in the Bolivian Andes Catherine Domanska · John W. Janusek Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University Introduction Khonkho Wankane lies in the Lake Titicaca Basin of the Bolivian Andes. Although the site has been known to archaeologists since 1935, it was only through the ongoing research of Proyecto Jach’a Machaca that we understood that Khonkho was an early ritual center (AD BC) that pre-dated Tiwanaku culture (AD ). The focus of the center was a massive constructed platform that housed a ceremonial complex. Data – the assemblage In Structure 12-C9 of Compound 3, we located nearly 1,000 disarticulated and jumbled bones of approximately 25 adults and children. None of these bones could reliably be associated with any other, and thus the number of individuals represented in this deposit could be much higher. In general, the bones were in an excellent state of preservation due to the plaster compound that coated them and the dense nature of most of the specimens. Hand and foot bones were vastly overrepresented as well as patellae and sternums. Crania and long bones were virtually absent aside from juvenile long bone epiphyses. Results Discussion The material remains of Structure 12-C9, Compound K3, appear to represent the careful selection and curation of human bone relics. Each bone was carefully chosen with respect to body part (no long bones or crania are present) and the bones were then plastered (it appears likely they were to be painted). Conclusion The importance of this assemblage of human remains is not, primarily, in what we can learn about the health status and demography of the population at hand, but what we can learn about past rituals focused on death. Bioarchaeological methods are well suited for this assemblage because the archaeological context and the osteological information cannot be separated – each only tells part of the story. Both are necessary to tell us about the people who deposited and curated the human bones in Structure 12-C9 of Compound K3 and the deceased whose bones were deposited. While conclusions are preliminary, results to date are suggestive. It appears that part of Compound K3 was dedicated to producing portable human relics. Tantalizing evidence at nearby sites (e.g., Tiwanaku) include burials that contained ONLY long bones, suggesting that this datum is a long- missing piece of a larger archaeological puzzle. Producing human relics was part of an emergent cult that centered on local ancestors who embodied the generative and animistic powers of the earth, and a religious ideology that presented seductive, even redemptive ideas regarding seasonal change, worldly regeneration, and human life and death. References Tim White Buikstra & Ubelaker Most recent work suggests that Khonkho was the focus of an early death cult. Evidence comes from two sources: 1)Each of the bounded ceremonial spaces at the site featured one or more carved sandstone monoliths. The monoliths depict single personages associated with a variety of zoomorphic images that herald earthly and aquatic forces, and symbolize generative and reproductive powers. Serpentine neonate catfish and falling humans with exposed ribs, representing deceased ancestors, narrate a story of life and death, and possibly, the creation of the focal ancestor embodied in the monolith. 2)The second line of evidence comes from a large, special-purpose structure (Structure 12-C9) excavated in Khonkho’s Compound K3, a walled residential-ritual enclosure. Structures in the vicinity of 12-C9 were producing a plaster substance, formed into blocks. 12-C9 contained 27 such blocks and several camelid bones for removing the plaster, as well as several bowls containing pigments. The structure also contained approximately 1,000 human bones and teeth, most of them covered with the plaster. ** Sex is best determined through the analysis of multiple characteristics – including cranial features and pelvic morphology – which were not available for this assemblage. Therefore sex could not be determined but the presence of a range of gracile and robust bones within the adult age bracket suggests that both males and females were present.** Pathology: With an assemblage of mostly adult hand and foot bones and vertebrae one would expect to find many signs of trauma and osteoarthritis. On the contrary, very few bones show signs of osteoarthritis, trauma or other pathologies aside from fractures and osteoarthritis of distal foot phalanges. There was one example of a complete fusion of the first cervical vertebrae and axis probably due to a traumatic injury. Cutmarks are macroscopically visible on 14 bones. They are primarily present on hand and foot bones but there was also one example on the anterio-lateral side of a thoracic vertebral body. They appear to have been made after the bones were coated in plaster. Total # of specimens = % fragmented (208 fragments) 78.6% whole (764 whole bones) Total MNI = 20 (based on cuneiform #1) Adult MNI = 15 Juvenile MNI = 5 INSERT PICTURE OF BONES IN SITU Fusion of cvert 1 and axis with no porosity, a sign of recent healing. T-vert and hand phalange with cutmarks and visible plaster compound. Age ranges slightly modified from Buikstra & Ubelaker’s guide (1994) due to the imprecise nature of aging hand and foot bones and restrictions in the field. CHILD 3-12 CHILD / Y.TEEN TEEN / Y.ADULT ADULT (based on molar) 3 (based on radii) 120 The context (Structure 12-C9) is unique, and human remains of deceased kin (or others) were brought specifically to Khonkho Wankane for curation, or; The context (Structure 12-C9) is a specific instance of a common practice. Evidence for this possibility include human interments at other sites containing only long bones and crania, precisely the bone types absent from Compound 3. Future research goals include determining the origins of the individuals represented at Khonkho Wankane through isotope analysis to determine if they are more likely to have been brought from distant locales or they are local people. Nearby sites, such as Tiwanaku, where human burials consisting of only human crania and long bones suggest: Gesso blocks excavated from Structure C3-17, Compound 3 showing the plaster that was used to coat the bones. Evidence such as cutmarks made after the bones were coated in plaster, and the presence of juvenile epiphyses which are attached to the long bone shaft with strong muscle attachments, suggest that the bones were taken from primary burials after decomposition. Every bone had a “token” or portable nature to it – the absence of larger, more cumbersome, yet more characteristically “human” long bones and crania, suggests that these bones were chosen for specific, as yet unknown reasons. Possibilities include 1) a need to be portable – in order to carry many bones, representing many individuals and/or for a long journey or 2) the need for the deposit to remain small. Whatever the reason, the choice of small, dense bones was deliberate. Who were the deceased, and why were they chosen for such elaborate post- mortem curation? A couple of hypotheses can be drawn: Acknowledgements: Thanks to Maribel Perez Arias and Scott C. Smith, who excavated the context Thanks to the national Science Foundation (BCS ), the National Geographic Society, And Vanderbilt University