Abstract
Sierra Las Navajas, known to archaeologists as "the Pachuca obsidian source," has been a major source of obsidian to Mesoamerican societies for more than 3000 years, producing a fine green obsidian unique in Middle America. It was the primary source of the obsidian that formed the economic backbone of the major sociopolitical centers of Classic period Teotihuacán, epi-Classic Toltec Tula, and Aztec Tenochtitlán. In this paper, the obsidian of Sierra Las Navajas is discussed in the following contexts: (1) geologically, because the extraordinary quality of the Pachuca obsidian, its ease of extraction, and its distinctive color and chemistry are a direct result of its geologic emplacement; (2) locally, as the different mining localities within Sierra Las Navajas reflect the varying needs of the cultures working them; and (3) globally, as the obsidians of Las Navajas were used in concert with obsidians from other sources, and were traded great distances across Mesoamerica. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Ponomarenko, A. L. (2004). The Pachuca obsidian source, Hidalgo, Mexico: A geoarchaeological perspective. Geoarchaeology, 19(1), 71–91. https://doi.org/10.1002/gea.10104
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