Paiján culture

The Paiján culture was an archaeological culture that developed on the northern coast of Peru between 8,700 and 5,900 BCE.[1] It was first described by Peruvian archaeologist Rafael Larco Hoyle in the 1940s from the Pampa de los Fósiles site.[2] Later research, mainly by French archaeologist Claude Chauchat, identified dozens of open air sites, which include camps, workshops and quarries.[3]

Generally, this culture would belong to the Lithic stage of cultural development.

Geography

Most findings are concentrated along the valleys of the rivers Jequetepeque, Cupisnique, Chicama and Moche in the northern coast of Peru; more limited evidences of Paiján presence have been found in the central and south coasts of Peru as well as in the highland site of El Inga in Ecuador.[4]

Environment

The Paiján environment was arid with sparse vegetation and small animals such as rodents, lizards and snails; further resources were provided by the sea which at the time was located 15 kilometers farther than today due to a .lower sea level.[5] To adapt to this environment, the Paiján developed long needle–like projectile points which were mounted on hollow shafts of cane or reed and be used as harpoons to catch fish; they also collected snails, hunted small animals such as vizcachas and used grinding stones to process plants.[6]

Paijan projectile points

Paijan stemmed points are separated into several classes when being classified as they are found on sites. These classes include: lanceolate, triangular, intermediate, and miscellaneous.

Common tools

Common Paijan tools used included single and double sidescrapers, infacials – pieces or fabular blocks retouched on one face only all around the edge to give them an ovate shape, borers – rare small jasper blocks that have 3 points, and the most abundant of all were denticulates which had thick and steep edges. Bifacials are another common artifact found on sites due to the difficulty it is to classify and describe them.[11]

Time period

Early Paiján sites, dated between 8,600 and 8,000 BCE, indicate large bands that moved seasonally between the coastal plains and the western slopes of the Andes; later sites, dated between 8,000 and 6,500 BCE, evidence smaller groups of decreased mobility.[12] According to anthropologist Tom Dillehay, a possible explanation for this change is that an amelioration of the climate increased the availability of wild plants and animals; thus, Paiján people required less movement to meet their requirements while still relying on hunting-gathering.[13]

Oldest human remains

In 1975, at La Pampa de los Fósiles, Claude Chauchat discovered skeletal remains of a teenager about 12-13 years old, and of a young woman of about 25 years old, buried in a layer of ash. Radiocarbon studies gave an age of 10,200 ± 180 before present. They are therefore considered as the oldest human remains in Peru.

See also

Notes

  1. Tom Dillehay et al, "The first settlers", p. 21.
  2. Tom Dillehay, The Settlement of the Americas, p. 145.
  3. Danièle Lavallée, The first South Americans, pp. 97–98.
  4. Tom Dillehay, The Settlement of the Americas, pp. 145–146.
  5. Danièle Lavallée, The first South Americans, p. 98.
  6. Michael Moseley, The Incas and their ancestors, pp. 93–94.
  7. “The Paijan Complex, Pampa De Cupisnique, Peru”, Claude Chauchat “Ñawpa Pacha: Journal of Andean Archaeology”, 13, 1975
  8. “The Paijan Complex, Pampa De Cupisnique, Peru”
  9. “The Paijan Complex, Pampa De Cupisnique, Peru”
  10. “The Paijan Complex, Pampa De Cupisnique, Peru”
  11. “The Paijan Complex, Pampa De Cupisnique, Peru”
  12. Tom Dillehay et al, "The first settlers", pp. 21–22.
  13. Tom Dillehay, "Profiles in Holocene History", p. 38.

References