Calakmul as a central place: Isotopic insights on urban Maya mobility and diet during the first millennium Ad

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Abstract

Isotopic investigations of human burials from excavations of the Autonomous University of Campeche (CIHS) at the prehispanic Maya capital of Calakmul in southeastern Mexico, near the border with Guatemala, include determination of radiocarbon dates; carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios in collagen; and strontium, carbon, and oxygen isotope ratios in tooth enamel. A total of 22 human and 5 faunal samples analyzed for strontium isotopes reveal a narrow range of variation in values, pointing to the likely local origin of over two-thirds of the central population of Calakmul, including two of its rulers. Carbon and nitrogen data confirm a typical Classic Maya diet at the site and identify a diet high in meat consumption for one dynastic individual. Interpreted jointly, the isotopic information offers new perspectives on the provenience and lifestyles of the residents of Calakmul, including a potential place of origin for the royal occupant of chamber tomb Burial VII-1.

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Price, T. D., Tiesler, V., Folan, W. J., & Tykot, R. H. (2018). Calakmul as a central place: Isotopic insights on urban Maya mobility and diet during the first millennium Ad. Latin American Antiquity, 29(3), 439–454. https://doi.org/10.1017/laq.2018.31

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