Abstract

This research characterizes and reconstructs clay procurement and production practices through the integration of in-situ portable XRF and petrographic analysis on ancient ceramics and clay materials recovered from the Mayales river subbasin (central Nicaragua). A particular choice for this study was the largest and arguably most significant archaeological site in the area, Aguas Buenas (cal 400–1250 CE), a pre-Hispanic indigenous agglomeration consisting of 371 human-made mounds of various shapes arranged in geometric patterns. Microanalytical approaches were applied to reconstruct the use of raw mineral resources in the production of ubiquitous pottery materials found at this site and in its immediate surroundings. The resulting compositional analysis produced geochemical and mineralogical data allowing for the characterisation of distinct, geologically-based compositional groups throughout the valley, improving on the limited geological data resolution previously available. The integrated microscopic and compositional analysis (through p-XRF) of archaeological pottery materials and raw clay samples, generates a number of hypotheses and insights about the nature of the Aguas Buenas site, and its role as a shared space amongst groups living in the Mayales river Subbasin. Additionally, this study provides a solid research framework of investigation that can be employed for more detailed and extensive future studies on pre-Hispanic human occupation in this research area or elsewhere.

Highlights

  • This research aims to define ceramic provenance at a micro-regional scale through the application of both chemical and mineralogical techniques including the use of chemometric approaches

  • Aguas Buenas is composed of 371 man-made mounds [1,2], making it the largest archaeological site with architectural remains of central Nicaragua, and the most extensive preHispanic site documented in Nicaragua to date

  • The analysis of this study is associated with the results of Casale et al [15] that presented results of portable X-ray fluorescence (p-X-ray fluorescence (XRF)) analysis on raw clay samples collected in the Mayales river subbasin (n = 44 samples), and in the Zapatera island (n = 5 samples), situated in the Nicaraguan Graben, near the western shore of Lake Cocibolca

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Summary

Introduction

This research aims to define ceramic provenance at a micro-regional scale through the application of both chemical and mineralogical techniques including the use of chemometric approaches. The area around Aguas Buenas has been the subject of intensive surveying and excavations in recent years [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12], in the process of which a total of 1671 surface structures were documented distributed across numerous clusters, and in combination with rock art panels [13]. These 1671 mounds are clustered in 47 different sites in the research area (Fig. 1)

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