5 results on '"Franchetti, Fernando"'
Search Results
2. Human biogeography and faunal exploitation in Diamante River basin, central western Argentina.
- Author
-
Otaola, Clara, Giardina, Miguel A., and Franchetti, Fernando R.
- Subjects
WATERSHEDS ,HOLOCENE Epoch ,HUNTER-gatherer societies ,BIOGEOGRAPHY ,ZOOARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
A biogeographic model used to describe human peopling of southern Mendoza, central western Argentina, proposed an intensification process activated by an increase in population growth rate during the Late Holocene. During this process, high‐ranked resources at the surroundings of residential camps were depleted, and hunter–gatherers broadened their diet by incorporating a larger number of low‐ranked prey and domesticated plant resources. In this paper, we evaluate an alternative hypothesis, focusing on zooarchaeological data from the Diamante River basin. The results show that faunal resource intensification does not appear to have occurred in the Diamante River basin during the Late Holocene. Faunal consumption in Diamante River basin mainly reflects the local fauna in each ecological zone. The data do not show a lack of higher ranked resources. We suggest it is more likely that the demographic increase was not significant enough to cause an impact on the faunal resources. The archaeological evidence should be improved and analysed in smaller scales to continue with the intensification debate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Obsidian conveyance among hunter-gatherers in northwestern Patagonia.
- Author
-
Franchetti, Fernando, Otaola, Clara, Salgán, Laura, Giardina, Miguel, and Morgan, Christopher
- Subjects
- *
OBSIDIAN , *HAZARDOUS occupations , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *COST analysis - Abstract
• Six obsidian sources increased their use in the Late Holocene in north Patagonia. • The closer source to Diamante Valley, is the least used. • The best quality source, Las Cargas, was the most used across the Late Holocene. • Obsidian helped to minimize risk in the occupation of high elevation locations. • Obsidian exchange routes may find a pattern in least cost path analysis results. • Exchange of obsidian followed routes through High elevations villages to sources. In this paper we explore obsidian conveyance in the Diamante Valley, in northwestern Patagonia, Argentina. Obsidian is the third most-common toolstone used in the Diamante Valley after basalts and local cryptocrystallines. Obsidian artifacts are predominantly projectile points and bifaces, with few cores and early-stage reduction debris. To explain these patterns, we conducted XRF sourcing and technological analysis of 177 obsidian artifacts collected there. We also conducted a GIS-based least cost path analysis to assess the costs of conveying obsidian from sources to sites in the Diamante watershed. We found that hunter-gatherers used Las Cargas as the principal obsidian source, followed by Maule 1 and 2, El Peceño, and Coche Quemado. The nearest source, Laguna del Diamante, was the least used. These data, combined with an analysis of the ways cores, formed tools, and debitage types were conveyed and ultimately deposited at sites in the Diamante watershed, suggest a late Holocene pattern of highland-oriented indirect access, implying highland village sites likely served as nodes in a regional and extraregional exchange network focused not only on obsidian but also on other goods, information, and social obligations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Past maize consumption correlates with population change in Central Western Argentina.
- Author
-
Peralta, Eva A., López, José Manuel, Freeman, Jacob, Abbona, Cinthia, Franchetti, Fernando, Ots, María José, Cahiza, Pablo, Neme, Gustavo A., and Gil, Adolfo F.
- Subjects
- *
HUNTER-gatherer societies , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *CORN , *NITROGEN isotopes , *STABLE isotopes , *PREDATION , *ASSOCIATION rule mining - Abstract
• The population trend of late Pleistocene-Holocene hunter-gatherers changed its trajectory ca. 2,300 cal years BP coincident with the adoption of domesticates. • After 2,300 cal years BP, a significant increase in human population occurred. We observe population increases ("booms") followed by notable drops ("busts"). • Stable isotope (ẟ13C) on human bone follow a similar trend, indicating an increased consumption of maize during the "boom" periods and a decreased consumption during the "bust" periods. • We propose that human population changes during the last 2,300 cal years BP correlate with levels of maize consumption. This paper explores the relationships between population change and human diet after the adoption of domesticated resources in northwest Mendoza, a subregion of central western Argentina (CWA). To estimate population, we used summed probability distributions of radiocarbon ages (RC-SPD). We used carbon and nitrogen stable isotope values (ẟ13C co , ẟ13C ca , and ẟ15N) obtained on human bone (collagen and carbonate) to reconstruct human diet. The population trend of late Pleistocene-Holocene hunter-gatherers changed its trajectory ca. 2300 cal years BP coincident with the adoption of domesticates. After this date, a significant increase in human population occurred. We observe population increases ("booms") followed by notable drops ("busts"). Stable isotopes (ẟ13C) on human bone follow a similar trend, indicating an increased consumption of maize during the "boom" periods and a decreased consumption during the "bust" periods. Based on the association between estimated changes in human population and changes in human bone isotope values over the last 2300 cal years BP, we propose that levels of maize consumption emerge from human predator–prey and plant-herbivore interactions. The use of maize, thus, is not part of a social evolutionary stage, but, rather, an outcome of continuous social-ecological process in which maize use may increase or decrease over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A model of long-term population growth with an application to Central West Argentina.
- Author
-
Freeman J, Gil AF, Peralta EA, Franchetti F, López JM, and Neme G
- Subjects
- Argentina, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Population Dynamics, Population Growth, Archaeology
- Abstract
We propose an Ideal Specialization Model to help explain the diversity of population growth trajectories exhibited across archaeological regions over thousands of years. The model provides a general set of expectations useful for guiding empirical research, and we provide a concrete example by conducting a preliminary evaluation of three expectations in Central West Argentina. We use kernel density estimates of archaeological radiocarbon, estimates of paleoclimate, and human bone stable isotopes from archaeological remains to evaluate three expectations drawn from the model's dynamics. Based on our results, we suggest that innovations in the production of food and social organization drove demographic transitions and population expansion in the region. The consistency of population expansion in the region positively associates with changes in diet and, potentially, innovations in settlement and social integration., Competing Interests: NO authors have competing interests., (Copyright: © 2024 Freeman et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.