International audienceThe Mochica culture developed on the northern Peruvian coast between a.d. 100 and 800. A zooarchaeological study of the remains discovered in graves at four main ceremonial sites—Sipán, San José de Moro, El Brujo, and Moche—provides evidence of 12 sacrificed species including domestic animals such as llamas, dogs, and guinea pigs, and wild animals such as bats and parrots. A comparison of zooarchaeological data with Mochica iconography shows that animals served a variety of ritual purposes, for example, as mortuary food and as guides for souls of the dead in the afterlife. They were also considered to be mediators between the world of the living and that of the dead. This study enhances our understanding of funerary an...
One of the few cases of animal domestication in the New World took place in the and ean highl and s ...
International audiencePastoralism and camelid management have been essential to all aspects of pre-H...
International audienceFourteen animal species have been identified in Mochica tombs (100-800 A.D.). ...
International audienceThe Mochica culture developed on the northern Peruvian coast between a.d. 100 ...
This dissertation examines how animals formed part of daily, economic, sociopolitical, and ceremonia...
International audienceThe discovery of the sacrificial remains of 140 children and 206 camelids sacr...
International audienceLlama (Lama glama) and alpaca (Vicugna pacos) are the only large domesticated ...
Iconic data on Mochica ceramics, found in the graves of the Northern Coast of Peru (and about 2 000 ...
The Mochica, or Moche (c. 100-800 AD) culture, flourished along the northern Peruvian coast. The Moc...
Llama (Lama glama) and alpaca (Vicugna pacos) are the only large domesticated animals indigenous to ...
One of the few cases of animal domestication in the New World took place in the and ean highl and s ...
International audiencePastoralism and camelid management have been essential to all aspects of pre-H...
International audienceFourteen animal species have been identified in Mochica tombs (100-800 A.D.). ...
International audienceThe Mochica culture developed on the northern Peruvian coast between a.d. 100 ...
This dissertation examines how animals formed part of daily, economic, sociopolitical, and ceremonia...
International audienceThe discovery of the sacrificial remains of 140 children and 206 camelids sacr...
International audienceLlama (Lama glama) and alpaca (Vicugna pacos) are the only large domesticated ...
Iconic data on Mochica ceramics, found in the graves of the Northern Coast of Peru (and about 2 000 ...
The Mochica, or Moche (c. 100-800 AD) culture, flourished along the northern Peruvian coast. The Moc...
Llama (Lama glama) and alpaca (Vicugna pacos) are the only large domesticated animals indigenous to ...
One of the few cases of animal domestication in the New World took place in the and ean highl and s ...
International audiencePastoralism and camelid management have been essential to all aspects of pre-H...
International audienceFourteen animal species have been identified in Mochica tombs (100-800 A.D.). ...