Recycling and Reconfiguring: Metalwork of Maya Communities at Lamanai and Tipu, Belize (original) (raw)

Analysis of the two largest southern Maya lowland metal assemblages, from Lamanai (n = 187) and Tipu (n = 99), Belize reveals that Mesoamerican and European technologies were negotiated through the processes of recycling objects to create new forms and juxtaposing objects of different provenances for bodily ornamentation. Lamanai's occupants began acquiring metal as early as a.d. 1100 and then engaged in on-site metallurgy as early as a.d. 1450, continuing into the early seventeenth century. Tipu was a nexus for metals between the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. At both sites, metal objects were recovered primarily from human burials and midden deposits. A program of typological study and compositional analysis revealed forms shared between the sites but evidence of on-site metallurgy is supported only at Lamanai. Metals from these Maya communities, both centers of Spanish reducción, demonstrate that the southern Maya lowlands was by no means a " refuge " from Spanish aggression.

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Maya Metallurgical Technology in Late Postclassic-Spanish Colonial Times: The View from Lamanai, Belize

ArcheoSciences, 2013

Recent archaeometallurgical studies at the ancient Maya site of Lamanai, Belize have begun to reveal the nature of copper metallurgy in the centuries just prior to and during Spanish contact in the Southern Maya Lowland Area. More copper artifacts have been recovered from controlled archaeological excavations at Lamanai than at any other site in the Southern Maya Lowland area. A total of 187 copper objects dating to the 12th through 16th centuries AD have been recovered; among these objects are ingots or pigs, blanks, prills and a substantial number of mis-cast objects, many of which are bells. The archaeological contexts in which copper bells, axes, needles, fish hooks, rings, and clothing ornaments have been recovered will be summarised. Forming technologies used in the creation of Maya copper artifacts as well as their chemical compositions were studied using scanning electron microscopy and optical light microscopy. The results of chemical compositional and microstructural analyses will be presented and discussed in the contexts of larger social and economic spheres that were part of the Maya world just before and during Spanish contact in Belize.

(2013) Maya Metallurgical Technology in Late Postclassic-Spanish Colonial Times: The View from Lamanai, Belize (Simmons and Shugar)

ArchéoSciences, 37, 2013

Recent archaeometallurgical studies at the ancient Maya site of Lamanai, Belize have begun to reveal the nature of copper metallurgy in the centuries just prior to and during Spanish contact in the Southern Maya Lowland Area. More copper artifacts have been recovered from controlled archaeological excavations at Lamanai than at any other site in the Southern Maya Lowland area. A total of 187 copper objects dating to the 12th through 16th centuries AD have been recovered; among these objects are ingots or pigs, blanks, prills and a substantial number of mis-cast objects, many of which are bells. The archaeological contexts in which copper bells, axes, needles, fish hooks, rings, and clothing ornaments have been recovered will be summarised. Forming technologies used in the creation of Maya copper artifacts as well as their chemical compositions were studied using scanning electron microscopy and optical light microscopy. The results of chemical compositional and microstructural analyses will be presented and discussed in the contexts of larger social and economic spheres that were part of the Maya world just before and during Spanish contact in Belize.

Negotiating a colonial Maya identity: metal ornaments from Tipu, Belize

Open Journal of Archaeometry, 2013

Archaeologists recovered Colonial-period metal ornaments from Tipu, Belize, the site of a Maya occupation from 300 BC to AD 1707. This project asks to what extent the technological attributes of these ornaments reflect Mesoamerican or European influences. Investigators used microanalytical techniques, such as metallography, energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence (ED-XRF), electron probe microanalyser with energy dispersive spectroscopy (EPMA-EDS) and wavelength dispersive spectroscopy (EPMA-WDS) and surface etching, to study compositions and microstructures of the metals. Comparison of these data with technological and stylistic information of metals from other pre-Columbian and Contact-period sites reveals a confluence of indigenous and European metallurgy. Whereas the needle and bell forms and the suite of copper and bronze compositions align with indigenous metallurgical practices, the existence of lacetags and the use of brass reflect European technology. The presence of metal orn...

The Context and Significance of Copper Artifacts in Postclassic and Early Historic Lamanai, Belize

Journal of Field Archaeology, 2009

l17e consider the archaeological contexts in which copper objects have been recovered at the ancient Maya site of Lamanai in northern Belize and the significance these objectshad for the residents of the community during Postclassic (ca. A.D. 950-1544) and Spanish colonial (post 1544) times. More copper objectshave been recoveredfrom controlled archaeological contexts at Lamanai than any other site in the southern Maya lowlands area. Bells make up the majority of the assemblage during the centuries just prior to and during historical times y but high status objectssuch as rings and clothing ornaments found in elite burials dominate in the Early Postclassicperiod. All of these objectswere imported from outside the Maya area. Utilitarian objectsy including needlesy axesy and fish hooksy are found in a variety of contexts during Late Postclassicand Spanish colonial timesy as are bells and rings. Production materialsy including prillsy blanksy and pigs/ingotsy in addition to mis-cast objects that are production failuresy also appear during this time. Nearly all of the copper objectsfound at Lamanai are distinctly Mesoamerican in form and designy and based on metallur;gical analyses it appears that manufacturing technologies were distinctly Mesoamerican as well. The presence ofproduction materials and mis-cast piecesy along with the results of chemical compositional and microstructural analysesy support the idea that the Maya at Lamanai were engaged in the on-site production of copper objects by late precolumbian times.

Archaeometallurgy at Lamanai, Belize: New Discoveries and Insights from the Southern Maya Lowland Area

Archaeometallurgy in Mesoamerica: Current Approaches and New Perspectives, 2013

In recent decades there has been much discussion among archaeologists about the transformative roles material objects play in human societies. Various scholars have focused attention on the ways that material culture is an integral part of social and economic systems through time, with considerable discourse centered on the role of specialized crafting in ancient societies (Apel

Late Postclassic-Spanish Colonial Period Stone Tool Technology in the Southern Maya Lowland Area: The View from Lamanai and Tipu, Belize

Lithic Technology, 2002

Maya lowland area recently have used ethnohistorical and archaeological information to better understand the complexities ofMaya Spanish interactions and the Spanish impact on traditional Maya culture. But the materialob jects that the Maya used during this time rarely have been analyzed in anyformal or systematic ways. In thisstudy Ipresent the resuitsofan analysis ofthe.formaIchippedstone tooisfrom Lamanai and Ttpu, two southern lowland Maya sites in Belize. Smail side-notched chert, chalcedony and obsidianarrowpointsare thepredominant toolform found in Late-TerminalPostclassicandEarIy Spanish Colonialperioddeposits at both sites. Variability in toolforms andmanufacturingstrat egies exists both within and between each ofthe lithic assemblages, andthe study ofthis variability can pro'CJide insights into Late Postclassic-Spanish Colonial Period Maya stone tool technology and, to some extent, the nature ofMaya-Spanish interaction andthe repercussions ofSpanish colo nial policies in Belize. Available ethnohistorical and archaeological information ;s considered together with observations on stone toolstyles anddiscrete iithic-manufacturing attributes to bet ter understand this little known Maya lithic technology.

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