2018
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.23600
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Wearing the marks of violence: Unusual trauma patterning at Coyo Oriental, Northern Chile

Abstract: The prevalence and location of these injuries suggest that conflict at Coyo Oriental, while of the same nature, was at a scale different to that seen elsewhere in the oases. We posit here that the development of social hierarchy, population growth, expansive social networks, and foreign contact that characterized the Middle Period may have resulted in a need for social control among the emergent elites of the region.

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Cited by 15 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, none of the individual modeled age ranges extend until even the middle of the 10 th century AD (calibrated). This finding is in line with earlier observations that the Coyo ayllu, for example, shows distinct patterns of trauma (Torres-Rouff et al 2018) and the presence of exotic tropical diseases (Costa Junqueira et al 2009;Marsteller et al 2011;Costa Junqueira and Llagostera 2014), as compared with many of its neighbors.…”
Section: Inter-ayllusupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…Moreover, none of the individual modeled age ranges extend until even the middle of the 10 th century AD (calibrated). This finding is in line with earlier observations that the Coyo ayllu, for example, shows distinct patterns of trauma (Torres-Rouff et al 2018) and the presence of exotic tropical diseases (Costa Junqueira et al 2009;Marsteller et al 2011;Costa Junqueira and Llagostera 2014), as compared with many of its neighbors.…”
Section: Inter-ayllusupporting
confidence: 91%
“…This finding buttresses the archaeological and bioarchaeological literature showing significant differences and inequalities between ayllus during the Middle Period. For example, our previous research has documented radical differences in the presence of violent injury between individuals interred at different cemeteries in this period (Torres-Rouff 2011;Torres-Rouff et al 2018), while, simultaneously, other aspects of mortuary treatment (e.g., the provisioning of Negro Pulido ceramics) are standardized to the point of ubiquity across time and ayllus (Stovel 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The 67.0% adult cranial trauma rate at Uraca is the highest of any published studies from contemporaneous populations in southern Peru and surrounding parts of the Andes (Andrushko & Torres, ; Fouant, ; Juengst & Skidmore, ; Kellner, ; Kurin, ; Lessa & Souza, ; Torres‐Rouff, ; Torres‐Rouff, Hubbe, & Pestle, ; Tung, , ; Whalen, ). This high frequency—for both males and females—suggests that violence was endemic in this part of the Majes valley for several centuries in the EIP and early MH.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%