Technological persistence in ceramic production in the southeastern Hispaniola. The case study of El Cabo (600-1502 CE)

Simone Casale, Kwinten van Dessel,Menno L. P. Hoogland,Patrick Degryse,Corinne L. Hofman

JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY(2022)

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Abstract
This research aims to provide a better understanding of the diffusion of ceramic morphological traits in the Greater Antilles and how communities experienced and integrated new ideas into their manufacturing traditions. The chaine operatoire approach together with the communities of practice theory produce a holistic methodology to unveil social and temporal connections between artifacts, sites and communities. A detailed petrographic and macro-trace analysis of the ceramic manufacturing techniques for the site of El Cabo (Dominican Republic) is provided. Results evidence a complex homogeneous assemblage characterized by one major techno-group but petrographic heterogeneity. The communities, who lived in El Cabo, experienced and integrated changes in vessel shape and style (from Ostionoid to Chicoid features), though maintained conservative and stable traditions in the main technological steps. The petrographic heterogeneity implies that the inhabitants of El Cabo were probably involved in a broader regional network of interaction and were thus not limited to their community for the production of their pottery. Communities from different locations were, as shown by the presence of raw materials from various and distant geological environments, affiliated with a common ancestor represented by the persistence of one shared technical tradition.
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Key words
Ceramic analysis,Local networks,Petrography,Greater Antilles,Technological study
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