Of Enclaves And Frontiers: The Nasca Presence In The Ica Highlands (260 B.C. – A.D. 640)

Authors

  • Kevin Lane CONICET - Instituto de Arqueología, FFyL, Universidad de Buenos Aires
  • Oliver Huaman Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos
  • Luis Coll Universidad de Buenos Aires, FFyL, IDECU (Instituto de las Culturas – UBA / CONICET)
  • Alexander Pullen University of Cambridge, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
  • David Beresford-Jones University of Cambridge, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
  • Charles French University of Cambridge, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.201701.005

Keywords:

Ica Highlands, Nasca, Early Horizon, Early Intermediate Period, frontier, enclave

Abstract

During 2014, research undertaken at the sites of Cerro San Bernardo (ACO3; 2,000 m above sea level) and Challaca (CH1; 2,015 m above sea level) revealed the first documented Nasca sites (260 B.C – A.D. 640) in the yunga ecozone of the upper drainage of the Ica River. Both sites also demonstrated evidence of an even earlier, Early Horizon occupation (840 – 260 B.C.). These two sites are located on small, mainly granite, knolls situated on the Northern and Southern banks of the upper drainage of the Ica River. From these sites, it is possible to oversee an extensive area of cultivation that extends from the mountains to the East down to the Western boundary of the Challaca-Tiraxi Canyon. An area, which these sites could well have controlled. Geographically, the canyon divides the Ica Highlands from the coastal area, giving this juncture geopolitical importance. It is possible that the strategic location of this Nasca enclave in the Ica Highlands was aimed at controlling access between coastal polities and highland sectors, while exploiting this zones rich, high-altitude resources. Probably, occupation of this strategic sector commenced during the Early Horizon (840 – 260 B.C.), pointing to a long presence by coastal groups in the highlands. The aim of this article then, is to tease-out patterns of control, interaction, and the type of frontier in existence between the Nasca and coeval, neighboring, highland cultural groups, thereby providing new evidence concerning Nasca presence in the upper drainage of the Ica River.

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Published

2017-12-15

How to Cite

Lane, K., Huaman, O., Coll, L., Pullen, A., Beresford-Jones, D., & French, C. (2017). Of Enclaves And Frontiers: The Nasca Presence In The Ica Highlands (260 B.C. – A.D. 640). Boletín De Arqueología PUCP, (22), 117–132. https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.201701.005