Abstract

A published case of metastatic cancer from a hunter-gather group in pre-Columbian Argentina analysed the effects this illness would have on group dynamics. This essay uses the published details of the case study to analyse the possibility of care being provided to the dying individual. After a detailed discussion on the skeletal analysis and diagnosis offered by the original authors, this essay proposes that prior to his illness this individual would have been an active contributor to his group, likely involved in the transport and manipulation of stone. The functional impact the individual would have experienced as the result of his illness is discussed including the impact on the rest of his group, i.e. reduced contributions to group subsistence and inability to maintain residential mobility in a nomadic lifestyle. This essay argues that, based on the accommodation of their ill member by continuing to supply food despite his deteriorating state, this group of hunter-gatherers valued their individual members more so than their contribution to the group. This case study provides an insight into the value system of a pre-Columbian hunter-gatherer group outside of the more commonly examined subsistence activities, trading and burial practices.

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