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      Initial source evaluation of archaeological obsidian from the Kuril Islands of the Russian Far East using portable XRF

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      Journal of Archaeological Science
      Elsevier BV

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          Organization and Formation Processes: Looking at Curated Technologies

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            Social networks and information: Non-“utilitarian” mobility among hunter-gatherers

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              Four-thousand-year-old gold artifacts from the Lake Titicaca basin, southern Peru.

              Artifacts of cold-hammered native gold have been discovered in a secure and undisturbed Terminal Archaic burial context at Jiskairumoko, a multicomponent Late Archaic-Early Formative period site in the southwestern Lake Titicaca basin, Peru. The burial dates to 3776 to 3690 carbon-14 years before the present (2155 to 1936 calendar years B.C.), making this the earliest worked gold recovered to date not only from the Andes, but from the Americas as well. This discovery lends support to the hypothesis that the earliest metalworking in the Andes was experimentation with native gold. The presence of gold in a society of low-level food producers undergoing social and economic transformations coincident with the onset of sedentary life is an indicator of possible early social inequality and aggrandizing behavior and further shows that hereditary elites and a societal capacity to create significant agricultural surpluses are not requisite for the emergence of metalworking traditions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Archaeological Science
                Journal of Archaeological Science
                Elsevier BV
                03054403
                June 2009
                June 2009
                : 36
                : 6
                : 1256-1263
                Article
                10.1016/j.jas.2009.01.014
                050a5a64-1d9a-4215-bced-58ba412bc096
                © 2009

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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