Huesos a la deriva. Tafonomía y tratamiento funerario en entierros Mochica Tardío de San José de Moro

Authors

  • Andrew Nelson University of Western Ontario
  • Luis Jaime Castillo Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.199701.006

Keywords:

San José de Moro, Skeletal remains, Taphonomy, Moche culture

Abstract

Wandering Bones. Tafonomy and Funerary Treatment in Mochica Tombs at San José de Moro

The focus of this study is a sample of human burials from the Precolumbian archaeological site of San José de Moro, Peru. This site is located in the coastal desert of northern Peru and this sample dates to the latter half of the Moche period (450 AD-750 AD). Many of the burials from this site demonstrate various degrees of disarticulation. Stratigraphic analysis has demonstrated that this disturbance cannot be the product of post-depositional forces. An analysis of the distribution of the bones within the tombs, and a review of the process of corporeal decomposition suggests that the disturbance happened before the bodies were placed in their tombs. The results indicate that the cadavers were wholly or partially mummified before burial, and that disarticulation ocurred as the brittle, mummified body was maneuvered into the tomb. The body was mummified either as a deliberate measure before transporting the corpse over long distances, or as a natural product of the curation of the body above ground in a dry environment, during an extended funeral ritual. This combination of archaeological and forensic analysis has yielded important insights into the burial practices of the Moche.

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Published

1997-03-26

How to Cite

Nelson, A., & Castillo, L. J. (1997). Huesos a la deriva. Tafonomía y tratamiento funerario en entierros Mochica Tardío de San José de Moro. Boletín De Arqueología PUCP, (1), 137–163. https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.199701.006