“…Expanding the correlates of status to include domestic residues is particularly relevant to the Malpaso Valley, Zacatecas, Mexico, where architectural and stylistic evidence suggest that the prehispanic occupation was part of the socially complex Mesoamerican cultural tradition, yet the expression of social status appears to be different than other Mesoamerican urban settlements in which power is primarily based on the control of resources (Blanton et al, 1996;Sanders and Nichols, 1988) and prestige goods, elaborate burials, and architecture mark status (Brumfiel and Earle, 1987;Chase and Chase, 1992;Chase, 1992;Haviland and Moholy-Nagy, 1992;Healan, 1993;Hirth, 1993;Pendergast, 1992;Smith, 1987Smith, , 1993Stark and Hall, 1993). In the Malpaso Valley, there is a lack of prestige items or significant wealth (Berney, 2002;Nelson, 1995;, limited evidence for craft specialization (Darling, 1998;Kantor, 1995;Strazicich, 1995;Trombold, 1985a;Wells, 2000), and a near-absence of individual burial treatment (Falhauber, 1960;Lelgemann, 2000;Nelson and Schiavitti, 1992;Pijoan and Mansilla, 1990;.…”