A Bioarchaeological and Biogeochemical Study of Warfare and Mobility in Andahuaylas, Peru (ca. ad 1160-1260)

Warfare impacts how people and populations can move about the landscape. Ethnographers have posited that internal warfare, conflict that takes place within a single society, is strongly associated with female abduction. In contrast, external warfare, combat between different societies, is often acco...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of osteoarchaeology Vol. 26; no. 1; pp. 93 - 103
Main Authors Kurin, D. S., Lofaro, E. M., Gómez Choque, D. E., Krigbaum, J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chichester Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.01.2016
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Warfare impacts how people and populations can move about the landscape. Ethnographers have posited that internal warfare, conflict that takes place within a single society, is strongly associated with female abduction. In contrast, external warfare, combat between different societies, is often accompanied by the in‐migration of men for purposes of defence. To test this assertion, we evaluate human remains from one of the most violent eras in Andean prehistory, the Late Intermediate Period (ad 1000–1400). In the south‐central highlands of Andahuaylas, Peru, this era witnessed the coalescence of two formidable polities, the Chanka and the Quichua. Ethnohistoric accounts describe internal warfare among the Chanka and external warfare between the Quichua and their neighbours. In this study, bioarchaeological and biogeochemical methods are marshalled to elucidate ancient patterns of violence and mobility with greater nuance. We employ strontium isotope analysis of tooth enamel apatite to inform on residential origin, and we reconstruct patterns of violent conflict through analysis of cranial trauma. In all, 265 crania were excavated from 17 cave ossuaries at two Chanka sites and one Quichua site. Data were collected on age, sex and cranial modification—an indicator of social identity and cranial trauma. A representative subsample of molars from 34 individuals subjected to strontium isotope analysis demonstrates that among the Chanka, violence was significantly directed towards social groups within society, marked by modified crania. The presence of two nonlocal women with signs of increased morbidity and mistreatment points to possible mobility‐by‐abduction. In contrast, among the Quichua, men have significantly more trauma, and wounds are concentrated on the anterior. Trauma on women is lower, nonlethal, and concentrated on the posterior. This divergent pattern is commonly observed in external warfare (raids and community defence), where men face attackers and women escape them. The presence of two nonlocal men supports a mobility model of strategic in‐migration. In sum, osteological and isotopic data sets are shown to reveal divergent life‐course experiences not captured by the archaeological data or historic records alone. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
AbstractList Abstract Warfare impacts how people and populations can move about the landscape. Ethnographers have posited that internal warfare, conflict that takes place within a single society, is strongly associated with female abduction. In contrast, external warfare, combat between different societies, is often accompanied by the in‐migration of men for purposes of defence. To test this assertion, we evaluate human remains from one of the most violent eras in Andean prehistory, the Late Intermediate Period ( ad 1000–1400). In the south‐central highlands of Andahuaylas, Peru, this era witnessed the coalescence of two formidable polities, the Chanka and the Quichua. Ethnohistoric accounts describe internal warfare among the Chanka and external warfare between the Quichua and their neighbours. In this study, bioarchaeological and biogeochemical methods are marshalled to elucidate ancient patterns of violence and mobility with greater nuance. We employ strontium isotope analysis of tooth enamel apatite to inform on residential origin, and we reconstruct patterns of violent conflict through analysis of cranial trauma. In all, 265 crania were excavated from 17 cave ossuaries at two Chanka sites and one Quichua site. Data were collected on age, sex and cranial modification—an indicator of social identity and cranial trauma. A representative subsample of molars from 34 individuals subjected to strontium isotope analysis demonstrates that among the Chanka, violence was significantly directed towards social groups within society, marked by modified crania. The presence of two nonlocal women with signs of increased morbidity and mistreatment points to possible mobility‐by‐abduction. In contrast, among the Quichua, men have significantly more trauma, and wounds are concentrated on the anterior. Trauma on women is lower, nonlethal, and concentrated on the posterior. This divergent pattern is commonly observed in external warfare (raids and community defence), where men face attackers and women escape them. The presence of two nonlocal men supports a mobility model of strategic in‐migration. In sum, osteological and isotopic data sets are shown to reveal divergent life‐course experiences not captured by the archaeological data or historic records alone. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Warfare impacts how people and populations can move about the landscape. Ethnographers have posited that internal warfare, conflict that takes place within a single society, is strongly associated with female abduction. In contrast, external warfare, combat between different societies, is often accompanied by the in‐migration of men for purposes of defence. To test this assertion, we evaluate human remains from one of the most violent eras in Andean prehistory, the Late Intermediate Period (ad 1000–1400). In the south‐central highlands of Andahuaylas, Peru, this era witnessed the coalescence of two formidable polities, the Chanka and the Quichua. Ethnohistoric accounts describe internal warfare among the Chanka and external warfare between the Quichua and their neighbours. In this study, bioarchaeological and biogeochemical methods are marshalled to elucidate ancient patterns of violence and mobility with greater nuance. We employ strontium isotope analysis of tooth enamel apatite to inform on residential origin, and we reconstruct patterns of violent conflict through analysis of cranial trauma. In all, 265 crania were excavated from 17 cave ossuaries at two Chanka sites and one Quichua site. Data were collected on age, sex and cranial modification—an indicator of social identity and cranial trauma. A representative subsample of molars from 34 individuals subjected to strontium isotope analysis demonstrates that among the Chanka, violence was significantly directed towards social groups within society, marked by modified crania. The presence of two nonlocal women with signs of increased morbidity and mistreatment points to possible mobility‐by‐abduction. In contrast, among the Quichua, men have significantly more trauma, and wounds are concentrated on the anterior. Trauma on women is lower, nonlethal, and concentrated on the posterior. This divergent pattern is commonly observed in external warfare (raids and community defence), where men face attackers and women escape them. The presence of two nonlocal men supports a mobility model of strategic in‐migration. In sum, osteological and isotopic data sets are shown to reveal divergent life‐course experiences not captured by the archaeological data or historic records alone. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Warfare impacts how people and populations can move about the landscape. Ethnographers have posited that internal warfare, conflict that takes place within a single society, is strongly associated with female abduction. In contrast, external warfare, combat between different societies, is often accompanied by the in-migration of men for purposes of defence. To test this assertion, we evaluate human remains from one of the most violent eras in Andean prehistory, the Late Intermediate Period (ad 1000-1400). In the south-central highlands of Andahuaylas, Peru, this era witnessed the coalescence of two formidable polities, the Chanka and the Quichua. Ethnohistoric accounts describe internal warfare among the Chanka and external warfare between the Quichua and their neighbours. In this study, bioarchaeological and biogeochemical methods are marshalled to elucidate ancient patterns of violence and mobility with greater nuance. We employ strontium isotope analysis of tooth enamel apatite to inform on residential origin, and we reconstruct patterns of violent conflict through analysis of cranial trauma. In all, 265 crania were excavated from 17 cave ossuaries at two Chanka sites and one Quichua site. Data were collected on age, sex and cranial modification--an indicator of social identity and cranial trauma. A representative subsample of molars from 34 individuals subjected to strontium isotope analysis demonstrates that among the Chanka, violence was significantly directed towards social groups within society, marked by modified crania. The presence of two nonlocal women with signs of increased morbidity and mistreatment points to possible mobility-by-abduction. In contrast, among the Quichua, men have significantly more trauma, and wounds are concentrated on the anterior. Trauma on women is lower, nonlethal, and concentrated on the posterior. This divergent pattern is commonly observed in external warfare (raids and community defence), where men face attackers and women escape them. The presence of two nonlocal men supports a mobility model of strategic in-migration. In sum, osteological and isotopic data sets are shown to reveal divergent life-course experiences not captured by the archaeological data or historic records alone.
Author Kurin, D. S.
Krigbaum, J.
Lofaro, E. M.
Gómez Choque, D. E.
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: D. S.
  surname: Kurin
  fullname: Kurin, D. S.
  email: dkurin@anth.ucsb.edu
  organization: Department of Anthropology, HSSB 1002, University of California, CA, Santa Barbara, USA
– sequence: 2
  givenname: E. M.
  surname: Lofaro
  fullname: Lofaro, E. M.
  organization: Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, FL, Gainesville, USA
– sequence: 3
  givenname: D. E.
  surname: Gómez Choque
  fullname: Gómez Choque, D. E.
  organization: Departamento de Ciencias Básicas y Humanidades, Universidad Nacional José María Arguedas, Jr., Apurímac, Andahuaylas, Perú
– sequence: 4
  givenname: J.
  surname: Krigbaum
  fullname: Krigbaum, J.
  organization: Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, FL, Gainesville, USA
BookMark eNp90MlOwzAQBmALgQQUxCtY4gAIUrzFy7Eg9lXsN2vqODQQ4uI0grw9KUXc4DTW708zo1lG81WoPEJrlPQpIWw3QJ9xo-fQEiXGJJRRNj99C5UIzZ4W0XJdvxDS_TG2hMoB3isCRDcCH8rwXDgoMVTZNH32wY3823d0O2myFoccP0LMIfpvcxGGRVlMWlxUeFBlMGqgLaHewdc-NnjTQR9DhimVpFtDkq0VtJBDWfvVn9pD94cHd_vHyfnV0cn-4DxxPE11YrQB5yinwuUEhBgKBYKL1A1dnudGdg1TLZXyjBNOBHRpJggV2iiQQy55D63P-o5jeG98PbEvoYlVN9JSI1JJUiX0v0pJTbUy3HRqY6ZcDHUdfW7HsXiD2FpK7PTgNoCdHryT2zP5UZS-_YvZq8GPTma6qCf-81dDfLVScZXax8sj-8DOTveebpTV_As0yI0D
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ijpp_2019_08_004
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10816_021_09519_5
crossref_primary_10_1017_qua_2023_23
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ijpp_2019_06_007
crossref_primary_10_1086_692026
crossref_primary_10_1038_s41597_024_03148_9
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10814_023_09192_0
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jasrep_2021_103264
crossref_primary_10_1007_s12520_017_0587_1
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jasrep_2017_03_047
crossref_primary_10_1111_ahg_12145
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10814_020_09155_9
crossref_primary_10_1111_aman_12944
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jas_2020_105121
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_trac_2017_02_005
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ijpp_2019_12_006
crossref_primary_10_1111_aman_12860
crossref_primary_10_1371_journal_pone_0248209
Cites_doi 10.1525/pol.1999.22.1.42
10.1525/aa.1968.70.2.02a00040
10.1007/s100400050226
10.1186/1471‐2156‐13‐30
10.5744/florida/9780813037677.001.0001
10.1177/106939719202600108
10.1002/ajpa.22383
10.1177/002200277602000102
10.2307/2694316
10.1146/annurev.anthro.30.1.573
10.1002/ajpa.20480
10.1016/j.jaa.2011.06.005
10.1525/aa.1971.73.3.02a00040
10.2307/j.ctvdtpkd5
10.1111/1475-4754.00047
10.1016/S0883-2927(99)00069-4
10.1017/CBO9780511802676
10.1525/ae.1974.1.2.02a00050
10.1086/338290
10.1111/j.1475-4754.2004.00140.x
10.1016/j.jas.2004.11.011
10.1016/S0047-2484(85)80029-4
10.4000/books.ifea.2333
10.1007/s10816-006-9009-x
10.1177/106939717400900201
10.1080/14623528.2011.559111
10.1007/s10814-008-9021-7
10.2113/gsecongeo.98.8.1575
10.1177/106939717501000302
10.1002/ajpa.1330860210
10.1016/j.jas.2003.10.009
10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.09.003
10.1002/(SICI)1096-8644(1997)25 <139::AID-AJPA6>3.0.CO;2-#
10.1016/S0016-7037(99)00208-2
10.4324/9780203218310-5
10.1177/0022002785029004001
10.1007/978-3-642-65367-4
10.1111/j.1556-4029.2006.00219.x
10.1016/S0021-9258(18)69382-2
10.1016/S0883-2927(02)00072-0
10.1177/106939717400900202
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Copyright Wiley Subscription Services, Inc. Jan-Feb 2016
Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Copyright_xml – notice: Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
– notice: Copyright Wiley Subscription Services, Inc. Jan-Feb 2016
– notice: Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
DBID BSCLL
AAYXX
CITATION
DOI 10.1002/oa.2398
DatabaseName Istex
CrossRef
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
DatabaseTitleList CrossRef



DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Anatomy & Physiology
Anthropology
EISSN 1099-1212
EndPage 103
ExternalDocumentID 3964330921
10_1002_oa_2398
OA2398
ark_67375_WNG_V2KJBXR7_8
Genre article
Feature
GeographicLocations Peru
GeographicLocations_xml – name: Peru
GroupedDBID .3N
.GA
.Y3
05W
0R~
10A
1L6
1OB
1OC
1ZS
2FS
31~
33P
3SF
3WU
4.4
50Y
50Z
51W
51X
52M
52N
52O
52P
52S
52T
52U
52W
52X
53G
5GY
5VS
66C
702
7PT
8-0
8-1
8-3
8-4
8-5
8UM
930
A03
AACJB
AAESR
AAEVG
AAFWJ
AAHHS
AANLZ
AAONW
AASGY
AAXRX
AAZKR
ABCQN
ABCUV
ABDBF
ABEML
ABIJN
ABJNI
ABPVW
ACAHQ
ACBWZ
ACCFJ
ACCZN
ACGFS
ACHQT
ACPOU
ACSCC
ACXBN
ACXQS
ADBBV
ADEOM
ADIZJ
ADKYN
ADMGS
ADMHG
ADOZA
ADXAS
ADZMN
ADZOD
AEEZP
AEIGN
AEIMD
AEQDE
AEUQT
AEUYR
AFBPY
AFFPM
AFGKR
AFPWT
AFZJQ
AHBTC
AITYG
AIURR
AIWBW
AJBDE
AJXKR
ALAGY
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALUQN
AMBMR
AMYDB
ASPBG
ATUGU
AUFTA
AVWKF
AZBYB
AZFZN
AZVAB
BAFTC
BDRZF
BFHJK
BHBCM
BMNLL
BMXJE
BNHUX
BROTX
BRXPI
BSCLL
BY8
CS3
D-E
D-F
DCZOG
DPXWK
DR2
DRFUL
DRSTM
DVXWH
EBD
EBS
EJD
F00
F01
F04
FEDTE
G-S
G.N
GNP
GODZA
H.T
H.X
HF~
HGLYW
HHY
HVGLF
HZ~
IX1
J0M
JPC
KQQ
LATKE
LAW
LC2
LC3
LEEKS
LH4
LITHE
LOXES
LP6
LP7
LUTES
LW6
LYRES
M66
MEWTI
MK4
MRFUL
MRSTM
MSFUL
MSSTM
MXFUL
MXSTM
N04
N05
N9A
NF~
NNB
O66
O9-
OIG
P2P
P2W
P2X
P4D
PALCI
PQQKQ
Q.N
Q11
QB0
QRW
R.K
RIWAO
RJQFR
ROL
RWI
RWV
RX1
SAMSI
SUPJJ
UB1
V2E
W8V
W99
WBKPD
WHG
WIB
WIH
WIK
WOHZO
WQJ
WRC
WTM
WUPDE
WXSBR
WYISQ
XG1
XV2
ZZTAW
~02
~IA
~WT
AAYXX
CITATION
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c3558-989acc1314cf0a44b47a4345cbcfff9611658677e230304acffd4014897a6b363
IEDL.DBID DR2
ISSN 1047-482X
IngestDate Thu Oct 10 19:51:09 EDT 2024
Thu Oct 10 16:55:36 EDT 2024
Fri Aug 23 03:11:23 EDT 2024
Sat Aug 24 00:56:36 EDT 2024
Wed Oct 30 09:50:44 EDT 2024
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 1
Language English
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c3558-989acc1314cf0a44b47a4345cbcfff9611658677e230304acffd4014897a6b363
Notes ark:/67375/WNG-V2KJBXR7-8
istex:580C60A48A3E5E09702001909157EAADF7D898C1
ArticleID:OA2398
PQID 1768187939
PQPubID 30414
PageCount 11
ParticipantIDs proquest_journals_1945605748
proquest_journals_1768187939
crossref_primary_10_1002_oa_2398
wiley_primary_10_1002_oa_2398_OA2398
istex_primary_ark_67375_WNG_V2KJBXR7_8
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2016-01
January/February 2016
2016-01-00
20160101
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2016-01-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 01
  year: 2016
  text: 2016-01
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationPlace Chichester
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Chichester
PublicationTitle International journal of osteoarchaeology
PublicationTitleAlternate Int. J. Osteoarchaeol
PublicationYear 2016
Publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Publisher_xml – name: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
– name: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
References Cieza de Leon P. 1996 [1553]. La Crónica del Peru. Crónices de America 4: Madrid.
Walker PL. 2001. A bioarchaeological perspective on the history of violence. Annual Review of Anthropology 30: 573-596.
Ember CR. 1975. Residential variation among hunter-gatherers. Cross Cultural Research 10: 199-227.
Ta'ala SC, Berg GE, Haden K. 2006. Blunt force cranial trauma in the Cambodian killing fields. Journal of Forensic Sciences 51(5): 996-1001.
Reid DJ, Dean MC. 2006. Variation in modern human enamel formation times. Journal of Human Evolution 50(3): 329-346.
Hostnig R, Palomino PD, Decoster JJ. 2007. Proceso de composición y titulación de tierras en Apurímac. Tomo I y II. Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas y Asesoramiento: Cuzco.
Horowitz DL. 1985. Ethnic Groups in Conflict. University of California Press: Berkeley.
Chiaradia M, Gallay A, Todt W. 2003. Different contamination styles of prehistoric human teeth at a Swiss necropolis (Sion, Valais) inferred from lead and strontium isotopes. Applied Geochemistry 18(3): 353-370.
Divale WT, Chamberis F, Gangloff D. 1976. War, peace, and marital residence in pre-industrial societies. Journal of Conflict Resolution 20: 57-78.
Ferguson RB. 1984. Warfare, culture, and environment. Academic Press: Orlando, FL.
Larsen CS. 1997. Bioarchaeology: Interpreting Behavior from the Human Skeleton. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
Duviols P. 1986. Cultura andina y represión: procesos y visitas de idolatrias y hechicerias Cajatambo, siglo XVII. Centro de Estudios Rurales Andinos Bartolome de las Casas: Cuzco.
Kohn, M, Schoeninger MJ, Barker WW. 1999. Altered states: Effects of diagenesis on fossil tooth chemistry. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 63(18): 2737-2747.
Torres-Rouff C. 2002. Cranial vault modification and ethnicity in Middle Horizon San Pedro de Atacama, Chile. Current Anthropology 43: 163-171
Ember CR, Ember M. 1992. Warfare, aggression, and resource problems: Cross-cultural codes. Cross Cultural Research 26: 169-226.
Ember CR. 1974. An evaluation of alternative theories of matrilocal versus patrilocal residence. Cross Cultural Research 9: 135-149.
Faure G. 1986. Principles of Isotope Geology. John Wiley: New York.
Divale WT. 1974. Migration, external warfare, and matrilocal residence. Cross Cultural Research 9: 75-133.
Tung TA. 2012. Violence, ritual, and the Wari Empire: A social bioarchaeology of imperialism in the ancient Andes. University of Florida Press: Gainesville.
Hodell DA, Quinn RL, Brenner M, Kamenov G. 2004. Spatial variation of strontium isotopes (87Sr/86Sr) in the Maya region: A tool for tracking ancient human migration. Journal of Archaeological Science 31(5): 585-601.
Maldonado D. 2002 [1539]. Encomienda de Andahuaylas. In: Diego Maldonado y los Chancas. Julien C. Revista Andina 34: 183-197.
Bentley AR. 2006. Strontium isotopes from the earth to the archaeological skeleton: A review. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 13: 135-187.
Dean MC, Beynon AD. 1991. Histological reconstruction of crown formation times and initial root formation times in a modern human child. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 86(2): 215-228.
White WM. 2013. Geochemistry. Wiley Blackwell: New York.
Marocco R. 1975. Geología de los cuadrángulos de Andahuaylas, Abancay y Cotabambas. Instituto de Geología, Minería y Metalurgia: Lima.
Otterbein KF. 1968. Internal war: A cross-cultural study. American Anthropologist 70: 277-289.
Wright LE. 2005. Identifying immigrants to Tikal, Guatemala: Defining local variability in strontium isotope ratios of human tooth enamel. Journal of Archaeological Science 32 555-566.
Betanzos J. 2004 [1557]. Suma y narración de los Incas. Polifemo: Lima.
Jørgensen NO, Morthorst J, Holm PM. 1999. Strontium-isotope studies of "brown water" (organic-rich groundwater) from Denmark. Hydrogeology Journal 7(6): 533-539.
Budd P, Montgomery M, Barreiro B, Thomas RG. 2000. Differential diagenesis of strontium in archaeological human dental tissues. Applied Geochemistry 15: 687-694.
Tung TA, Knudson KJ. 2011. Identifying locals, migrants, and captives in the Wari heartland: A bioarchaeological and biogeochemical study of human remains from Conchopata, Peru. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 30: 247-261.
Ross MH. 1985. Internal and external conflict and violence cross-cultural evidence and a new analysis. Journal of Conflict Research 29: 547-579.
Taylor CC. 1999. A gendered genocide: Tutsi women and Hutu extremists in the 1994 Rwanda genocide. Politcal and Legal Anthropology Review 22: 42-54.
Baca M, Doan K, Sobcyzk M, Stankovic A, Weglenski P. 2012. Ancient DNA reveals kinship burial patterns of a pre-Columbian Andean community. BMC Gen. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2156-13-30.
Perello J, Carlotto V, Zarate A, Ramos P, Posso H, Neyra C, Caballero A, Fuster N, Muhr R. 2003. Porphyry-style alteration and mineralization of the Middle Eocene to early Oligocene Andahuaylas-Yauri Belt, Cuzco region, Peru. Economic Geology 98: 1575-1605.
Likins RC, McCann HG, Possner AS, Scott DB. 1960. Comparative fixation of calcium and strontium by synthetic hydroxyapatite. Journal of Biological Chemistry 235: 2152-2156.
Martin DL, Harrod RP, Fields M. 2010. Beaten down and worked to the bone: Bioarchaeological investigations of women and violence in the ancient Southwest. Landscape of Violence 1: 3.
Schott RM. 2011. War rape, natality and genocide. Journal of Genocide Research 13: 5-21.
Peregrine PN. 2001. Matrilocality, corporate strategy, and the organization of production in the Chacoan world. American Antiquity 1: 36-46.
Hayano DM. 1974. Marriage, alliance, and warfare: A view from the New Guinea Highlands. American Ethnologist 1: 281-293.
Covey RA. 2008. Multiregional perspectives on the archaeology of the Andes during the Late Intermediate Period (c. A.D. 1000-1400). Journal of Archaeological Research 16: 287-338.
Kurin DS. 2013. Trepanation in south-central Peru during the early Late Intermediate period (ca. AD 1000-1250). American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 152(4):484-494.
Bauer BS, Kellett LC, Silva MA. 2010. The Chanka: Archaeological research in Andahuaylas (Apurimac), Peru. UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology: Los Angeles.
Murdock GP. 1949. Social Structure. Macmillan: New York.
Knudson KJ, Price TD. 2007. Utility of multiple chemical techniques in archaeological residential mobility studies: Case studies from Tiwanaku- and Chiribaya-affiliated sites in the Andes. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 132: 25-39.
Ferguson RB. 2011. Tribal Warfare. In The Encyclopedia of War. Wiley Blackwell: New York.
Lovell N. 1997. Trauma analysis in paleopathology. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 40: 139-170.
Arkush EN, Tung TA. 2013. Patterns of war in the Andes from the archaic to the late horizon: Insights from settlement patterns and cranial trauma. Journal of Archaeological Research: 1-63.
Ember M, Ember CR. 1971. The conditions favoring matrilocal versus patrilocal residence. American Anthropologist 73: 571-594.
Ericson JE. 1985. Strontium isotope characterization in the study of prehistoric human ecology. Journal of Human Evolution 14: 503-514.
Martin DL, Frayer T (eds.). 1997. Troubled Times: Osteological and Anthropological Evidence of Violence. Gordon and Breach: New York.
Knudson KJ, Price TD, Buikstra JE, Blom DE. 2004. The use of strontium isotope analysis to investigate Tiwanaku migration and mortuary ritual in Bolivia and Peru. Archaeometry 46: 5-18.
Price TD, Burton JH, Bentley RA. 2002. The characterization of biologically available strontium isotope ratios for the study of prehistoric migration. Archaeometry 44: 117-135.
Faure G, Powell JL. 1972. Strontium Isotope Geology. Springer-Verlag: New York.
1976; 20
1985; 29
1997; 40
1960; 235
1975
1974; 1
1972
2011; 13
2003; 18
1975; 10
1974; 9
2003; 98
2004; 31
2010; 1
2000; 15
2007; 132
1991; 86
2002; 43
2002; 44
1986
1985
1984
2005; 32
2013; 152
1982
1949
1985; 14
2006; 50
2006; 51
2012
2006; 13
2011
2010
2002; 34
2008; 16
2004; 46
2009
1997
2011; 30
1996
2007
1999; 22
2006
1994
2004
1999; 63
1993
2003
1999; 7
1971; 73
1992; 26
2001; 1
2013
1968; 70
2001; 30
Duviols P (e_1_2_9_15_1) 1986
e_1_2_9_31_1
e_1_2_9_52_1
e_1_2_9_50_1
e_1_2_9_35_1
e_1_2_9_56_1
e_1_2_9_12_1
e_1_2_9_33_1
e_1_2_9_54_1
Bauer BS (e_1_2_9_4_1) 2010
Cieza de Leon P (e_1_2_9_10_1) 1996
Hostnig R (e_1_2_9_30_1) 2007
e_1_2_9_14_1
e_1_2_9_16_1
e_1_2_9_37_1
e_1_2_9_58_1
e_1_2_9_18_1
e_1_2_9_64_1
Murdock GP (e_1_2_9_45_1) 1949
e_1_2_9_20_1
e_1_2_9_62_1
e_1_2_9_22_1
Martin DL (e_1_2_9_44_1) 2010; 1
e_1_2_9_8_1
e_1_2_9_60_1
White WM (e_1_2_9_63_1) 2013
Betanzos J (e_1_2_9_6_1) 2004
e_1_2_9_26_1
e_1_2_9_49_1
e_1_2_9_28_1
e_1_2_9_47_1
Ferguson RB (e_1_2_9_25_1) 2011
e_1_2_9_53_1
Ferguson RB (e_1_2_9_24_1) 2003
e_1_2_9_51_1
e_1_2_9_11_1
e_1_2_9_34_1
e_1_2_9_57_1
Arkush EN (e_1_2_9_2_1) 2013
e_1_2_9_13_1
e_1_2_9_32_1
Maldonado D (e_1_2_9_41_1) 2002; 34
e_1_2_9_55_1
Horowitz DL (e_1_2_9_29_1) 1985
Walker PL (e_1_2_9_61_1) 1997
Martin DL (e_1_2_9_43_1) 1997
Marocco R (e_1_2_9_42_1) 1975
e_1_2_9_38_1
e_1_2_9_17_1
e_1_2_9_36_1
e_1_2_9_59_1
e_1_2_9_19_1
Likins RC (e_1_2_9_39_1) 1960; 235
Faure G (e_1_2_9_21_1) 1986
e_1_2_9_40_1
e_1_2_9_46_1
e_1_2_9_7_1
e_1_2_9_5_1
e_1_2_9_3_1
e_1_2_9_9_1
Ferguson RB (e_1_2_9_23_1) 1984
e_1_2_9_27_1
e_1_2_9_48_1
References_xml – year: 2011
– year: 1985
– volume: 34
  start-page: 183
  year: 2002
  end-page: 197
  article-title: Encomienda de Andahuaylas. In: Diego Maldonado y los Chancas. Julien C
  publication-title: Revista Andina
– volume: 9
  start-page: 75
  year: 1974
  end-page: 133
  article-title: Migration, external warfare, and matrilocal residence
  publication-title: Cross Cultural Research
– year: 2009
– volume: 15
  start-page: 687
  year: 2000
  end-page: 694
  article-title: Differential diagenesis of strontium in archaeological human dental tissues
  publication-title: Applied Geochemistry
– volume: 86
  start-page: 215
  issue: 2
  year: 1991
  end-page: 228
  article-title: Histological reconstruction of crown formation times and initial root formation times in a modern human child
  publication-title: American Journal of Physical Anthropology
– volume: 44
  start-page: 117
  year: 2002
  end-page: 135
  article-title: The characterization of biologically available strontium isotope ratios for the study of prehistoric migration
  publication-title: Archaeometry
– volume: 22
  start-page: 42
  year: 1999
  end-page: 54
  article-title: A gendered genocide: Tutsi women and Hutu extremists in the 1994 Rwanda genocide
  publication-title: Politcal and Legal Anthropology Review
– volume: 29
  start-page: 547
  year: 1985
  end-page: 579
  article-title: Internal and external conflict and violence cross‐cultural evidence and a new analysis
  publication-title: Journal of Conflict Research
– volume: 73
  start-page: 571
  year: 1971
  end-page: 594
  article-title: The conditions favoring matrilocal versus patrilocal residence
  publication-title: American Anthropologist
– volume: 51
  start-page: 996
  issue: 5
  year: 2006
  end-page: 1001
  article-title: Blunt force cranial trauma in the Cambodian killing fields
  publication-title: Journal of Forensic Sciences
– volume: 152
  start-page: 484
  issue: 4
  year: 2013
  end-page: 494
  article-title: Trepanation in south‐central Peru during the early Late Intermediate period (ca. AD 1000–1250)
  publication-title: American Journal of Physical Anthropology
– year: 1975
– volume: 46
  start-page: 5
  year: 2004
  end-page: 18
  article-title: The use of strontium isotope analysis to investigate Tiwanaku migration and mortuary ritual in Bolivia and Peru
  publication-title: Archaeometry
– volume: 16
  start-page: 287
  year: 2008
  end-page: 338
  article-title: Multiregional perspectives on the archaeology of the Andes during the Late Intermediate Period (c. A.D. 1000–1400)
  publication-title: Journal of Archaeological Research
– year: 1994
– volume: 1
  start-page: 36
  year: 2001
  end-page: 46
  article-title: Matrilocality, corporate strategy, and the organization of production in the Chacoan world
  publication-title: American Antiquity
– volume: 50
  start-page: 329
  issue: 3
  year: 2006
  end-page: 346
  article-title: Variation in modern human enamel formation times
  publication-title: Journal of Human Evolution
– year: 1986
– volume: 98
  start-page: 1575
  year: 2003
  end-page: 1605
  article-title: Porphyry‐style alteration and mineralization of the Middle Eocene to early Oligocene Andahuaylas‐Yauri Belt, Cuzco region, Peru
  publication-title: Economic Geology
– year: 1982
– volume: 14
  start-page: 503
  year: 1985
  end-page: 514
  article-title: Strontium isotope characterization in the study of prehistoric human ecology
  publication-title: Journal of Human Evolution
– volume: 9
  start-page: 135
  year: 1974
  end-page: 149
  article-title: An evaluation of alternative theories of matrilocal versus patrilocal residence
  publication-title: Cross Cultural Research
– volume: 10
  start-page: 199
  year: 1975
  end-page: 227
  article-title: Residential variation among hunter‐gatherers
  publication-title: Cross Cultural Research
– year: 2004
– year: 1997
– volume: 40
  start-page: 139
  year: 1997
  end-page: 170
  article-title: Trauma analysis in paleopathology
  publication-title: Yearbook of Physical Anthropology
– year: 1972
– volume: 31
  start-page: 585
  issue: 5
  year: 2004
  end-page: 601
  article-title: Spatial variation of strontium isotopes ( Sr/ Sr) in the Maya region: A tool for tracking ancient human migration
  publication-title: Journal of Archaeological Science
– year: 1949
– volume: 1
  start-page: 3
  year: 2010
  article-title: Beaten down and worked to the bone: Bioarchaeological investigations of women and violence in the ancient Southwest
  publication-title: Landscape of Violence
– volume: 70
  start-page: 277
  year: 1968
  end-page: 289
  article-title: Internal war: A cross‐cultural study
  publication-title: American Anthropologist
– volume: 30
  start-page: 247
  year: 2011
  end-page: 261
  article-title: Identifying locals, migrants, and captives in the Wari heartland: A bioarchaeological and biogeochemical study of human remains from Conchopata, Peru
  publication-title: Journal of Anthropological Archaeology
– year: 1993
– volume: 18
  start-page: 353
  issue: 3
  year: 2003
  end-page: 370
  article-title: Different contamination styles of prehistoric human teeth at a Swiss necropolis (Sion, Valais) inferred from lead and strontium isotopes
  publication-title: Applied Geochemistry
– volume: 132
  start-page: 25
  year: 2007
  end-page: 39
  article-title: Utility of multiple chemical techniques in archaeological residential mobility studies: Case studies from Tiwanaku‐ and Chiribaya‐affiliated sites in the Andes
  publication-title: American Journal of Physical Anthropology
– volume: 13
  start-page: 135
  year: 2006
  end-page: 187
  article-title: Strontium isotopes from the earth to the archaeological skeleton: A review
  publication-title: Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory
– year: 2007
– volume: 1
  start-page: 281
  year: 1974
  end-page: 293
  article-title: Marriage, alliance, and warfare: A view from the New Guinea Highlands
  publication-title: American Ethnologist
– year: 1996
– volume: 30
  start-page: 573
  year: 2001
  end-page: 596
  article-title: A bioarchaeological perspective on the history of violence
  publication-title: Annual Review of Anthropology
– volume: 63
  start-page: 2737
  issue: 18
  year: 1999
  end-page: 2747
  article-title: Altered states: Effects of diagenesis on fossil tooth chemistry
  publication-title: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
– year: 2010
– year: 2012
– volume: 32
  start-page: 555
  year: 2005
  end-page: 566
  article-title: Identifying immigrants to Tikal, Guatemala: Defining local variability in strontium isotope ratios of human tooth enamel
  publication-title: Journal of Archaeological Science
– year: 1984
– volume: 20
  start-page: 57
  year: 1976
  end-page: 78
  article-title: War, peace, and marital residence in pre‐industrial societies
  publication-title: Journal of Conflict Resolution
– volume: 26
  start-page: 169
  year: 1992
  end-page: 226
  article-title: Warfare, aggression, and resource problems: Cross‐cultural codes
  publication-title: Cross Cultural Research
– start-page: 9
  year: 2003
– volume: 13
  start-page: 5
  year: 2011
  end-page: 21
  article-title: War rape, natality and genocide
  publication-title: Journal of Genocide Research
– year: 2006
– start-page: 1
  year: 2013
  end-page: 63
  article-title: Patterns of war in the Andes from the archaic to the late horizon: Insights from settlement patterns and cranial trauma
  publication-title: Journal of Archaeological Research
– volume: 235
  start-page: 2152
  year: 1960
  end-page: 2156
  article-title: Comparative fixation of calcium and strontium by synthetic hydroxyapatite
  publication-title: Journal of Biological Chemistry
– volume: 43
  start-page: 163
  year: 2002
  end-page: 171
  article-title: Cranial vault modification and ethnicity in Middle Horizon San Pedro de Atacama, Chile
  publication-title: Current Anthropology
– volume: 7
  start-page: 533
  issue: 6
  year: 1999
  end-page: 539
  article-title: Strontium‐isotope studies of “brown water” (organic‐rich groundwater) from Denmark
  publication-title: Hydrogeology Journal
– year: 2012
  article-title: Ancient DNA reveals kinship burial patterns of a pre‐Columbian Andean community
  publication-title: BMC Gen
– year: 2013
– ident: e_1_2_9_57_1
  doi: 10.1525/pol.1999.22.1.42
– ident: e_1_2_9_46_1
  doi: 10.1525/aa.1968.70.2.02a00040
– volume-title: Principles of Isotope Geology
  year: 1986
  ident: e_1_2_9_21_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Faure G
– volume: 34
  start-page: 183
  year: 2002
  ident: e_1_2_9_41_1
  article-title: Encomienda de Andahuaylas. In: Diego Maldonado y los Chancas. Julien C
  publication-title: Revista Andina
  contributor:
    fullname: Maldonado D
– ident: e_1_2_9_31_1
  doi: 10.1007/s100400050226
– ident: e_1_2_9_3_1
  doi: 10.1186/1471‐2156‐13‐30
– ident: e_1_2_9_59_1
  doi: 10.5744/florida/9780813037677.001.0001
– ident: e_1_2_9_19_1
  doi: 10.1177/106939719202600108
– ident: e_1_2_9_37_1
  doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22383
– ident: e_1_2_9_14_1
  doi: 10.1177/002200277602000102
– ident: e_1_2_9_48_1
  doi: 10.2307/2694316
– ident: e_1_2_9_62_1
  doi: 10.1146/annurev.anthro.30.1.573
– ident: e_1_2_9_35_1
  doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20480
– ident: e_1_2_9_60_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.jaa.2011.06.005
– volume-title: Warfare, culture, and environment
  year: 1984
  ident: e_1_2_9_23_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Ferguson RB
– volume-title: Troubled Times: Osteological and Anthropological Evidence of Violence
  year: 1997
  ident: e_1_2_9_43_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Martin DL
– start-page: 1
  year: 2013
  ident: e_1_2_9_2_1
  article-title: Patterns of war in the Andes from the archaic to the late horizon: Insights from settlement patterns and cranial trauma
  publication-title: Journal of Archaeological Research
  contributor:
    fullname: Arkush EN
– ident: e_1_2_9_55_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_16_1
  doi: 10.1525/aa.1971.73.3.02a00040
– volume-title: Social Structure
  year: 1949
  ident: e_1_2_9_45_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Murdock GP
– ident: e_1_2_9_8_1
– volume-title: The Chanka: Archaeological research in Andahuaylas (Apurimac), Peru
  year: 2010
  ident: e_1_2_9_4_1
  doi: 10.2307/j.ctvdtpkd5
  contributor:
    fullname: Bauer BS
– ident: e_1_2_9_51_1
  doi: 10.1111/1475-4754.00047
– volume-title: La Crónica del Peru
  year: 1996
  ident: e_1_2_9_10_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Cieza de Leon P
– ident: e_1_2_9_7_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0883-2927(99)00069-4
– ident: e_1_2_9_38_1
  doi: 10.1017/CBO9780511802676
– volume-title: Ethnic Groups in Conflict
  year: 1985
  ident: e_1_2_9_29_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Horowitz DL
– ident: e_1_2_9_27_1
  doi: 10.1525/ae.1974.1.2.02a00050
– ident: e_1_2_9_58_1
  doi: 10.1086/338290
– ident: e_1_2_9_34_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4754.2004.00140.x
– volume: 1
  start-page: 3
  year: 2010
  ident: e_1_2_9_44_1
  article-title: Beaten down and worked to the bone: Bioarchaeological investigations of women and violence in the ancient Southwest
  publication-title: Landscape of Violence
  contributor:
    fullname: Martin DL
– volume-title: Tribal Warfare. In The Encyclopedia of War
  year: 2011
  ident: e_1_2_9_25_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Ferguson RB
– ident: e_1_2_9_64_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2004.11.011
– ident: e_1_2_9_20_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0047-2484(85)80029-4
– ident: e_1_2_9_36_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_47_1
  doi: 10.4000/books.ifea.2333
– ident: e_1_2_9_5_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10816-006-9009-x
– ident: e_1_2_9_13_1
  doi: 10.1177/106939717400900201
– volume-title: Geochemistry
  year: 2013
  ident: e_1_2_9_63_1
  contributor:
    fullname: White WM
– ident: e_1_2_9_54_1
  doi: 10.1080/14623528.2011.559111
– ident: e_1_2_9_11_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10814-008-9021-7
– ident: e_1_2_9_49_1
  doi: 10.2113/gsecongeo.98.8.1575
– ident: e_1_2_9_32_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_18_1
  doi: 10.1177/106939717501000302
– ident: e_1_2_9_12_1
  doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330860210
– volume-title: Geología de los cuadrángulos de Andahuaylas, Abancay y Cotabambas
  year: 1975
  ident: e_1_2_9_42_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Marocco R
– ident: e_1_2_9_28_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2003.10.009
– ident: e_1_2_9_52_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.09.003
– volume-title: Proceso de composición y titulación de tierras en Apurímac
  year: 2007
  ident: e_1_2_9_30_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Hostnig R
– ident: e_1_2_9_40_1
  doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-8644(1997)25 <139::AID-AJPA6>3.0.CO;2-#
– ident: e_1_2_9_33_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0016-7037(99)00208-2
– start-page: 9
  volume-title: The State, Identity and Violence: Political Disintegration in the Post‐Cold War World
  year: 2003
  ident: e_1_2_9_24_1
  doi: 10.4324/9780203218310-5
  contributor:
    fullname: Ferguson RB
– ident: e_1_2_9_26_1
– ident: e_1_2_9_53_1
  doi: 10.1177/0022002785029004001
– volume-title: Cultura andina y represión: procesos y visitas de idolatrias y hechicerias Cajatambo, siglo XVII
  year: 1986
  ident: e_1_2_9_15_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Duviols P
– ident: e_1_2_9_22_1
  doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-65367-4
– volume-title: Suma y narración de los Incas
  year: 2004
  ident: e_1_2_9_6_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Betanzos J
– ident: e_1_2_9_56_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2006.00219.x
– volume: 235
  start-page: 2152
  year: 1960
  ident: e_1_2_9_39_1
  article-title: Comparative fixation of calcium and strontium by synthetic hydroxyapatite
  publication-title: Journal of Biological Chemistry
  doi: 10.1016/S0021-9258(18)69382-2
  contributor:
    fullname: Likins RC
– ident: e_1_2_9_50_1
– volume-title: Troubled Times: osteological and anthropological evidence of violence
  year: 1997
  ident: e_1_2_9_61_1
  contributor:
    fullname: Walker PL
– ident: e_1_2_9_9_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0883-2927(02)00072-0
– ident: e_1_2_9_17_1
  doi: 10.1177/106939717400900202
SSID ssj0009922
Score 2.2458832
Snippet Warfare impacts how people and populations can move about the landscape. Ethnographers have posited that internal warfare, conflict that takes place within a...
Abstract Warfare impacts how people and populations can move about the landscape. Ethnographers have posited that internal warfare, conflict that takes place...
SourceID proquest
crossref
wiley
istex
SourceType Aggregation Database
Publisher
StartPage 93
SubjectTerms Andes
Archaeology
Biogeochemistry
cranial modification
cranial trauma
Ethnography
Forensic anthropology
Head injuries
Human remains
locality
Prehistoric era
sex
strontium isotope analysis
Trauma
Violence
War
Title A Bioarchaeological and Biogeochemical Study of Warfare and Mobility in Andahuaylas, Peru (ca. ad 1160-1260)
URI https://api.istex.fr/ark:/67375/WNG-V2KJBXR7-8/fulltext.pdf
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002%2Foa.2398
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1768187939
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1945605748
Volume 26
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1faxQxEA9SX0TwT6tYWyUPpSi419tNLrv7uFVrqbRKsfbwJUyySS3F3bK9A9cnv4Pf0E_iTHa3vYqC-LSQTCCbSSa_GSa_YWwD7Z3y3shIJRYimTkTGStcZAykVqgYETQ5ivsHavdI7k0n04VSXx0_xGXAjU5GsNd0wMFcbF2RhtYwIu46tL6xSCmZ69XhFXEUsa0OPAQyS6bdc1kaudWPu3YP3aQl_XoNZC5C1XDX7Nxln4ZZdikmZ6P5zIzst98IHP_rN-6xOz0C5UW3Ze6zG65aZitFhd73l5Zv8pATGoLty-z2Qh2FdoVVBd8-rQO9khuMJoeqpNYTR7W3AvkAp-TElteeH0PjoXFBZr8OebgtP614UZXweQ4tQvcX_L1r5vyZhRGHkseot5_ff8ToAD1_wI52Xn94uRv1BRsiSyztUZ7lYG0sYmn9GKQ0MgUp5MQa673PFVH9EH-eQ79HjCVgaykppJmnoIxQ4iFbqurKPWJcZjIXVvlknFh0yiBPPICyJeCNOykzt8r4oD593vFy6I6BOdE1aFrSVbYZ1HrZD80ZpbGlE3188EZ_TN7ubU8PU42C64PedX-CL3SMfhhVYhf5n7tzRJ6IdSWO3gj6_ds09LuCPo__TWyN3UJI1gd51tnSrJm7Jwh7ZuZp2OG_ALOL_AM
link.rule.ids 315,783,787,1378,27936,27937,46306,46730
linkProvider Wiley-Blackwell
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV3NbtQwELagPYAqFWhBtBTwoapAIttN7HWSYwqUpe0uqGrpSj1YY8cuVUWCwq5EOPUd-oY8CR4n6Q8CCXGKZI8lx-OxvxmNvyFk3Z13wlrFAxFpCHhiVKA0M4FSEGsmQoeg0VEcjcXwkO9MBpM2qxLfwjT8EJcBN7QMf16jgWNAevOKNbSEHpLX3SbzztgZlm14s39FHYV8qx0TAU-iSfNgFodutgNv3ETzuKjfb8DM62DV3zbb98hxN88myeSsN5uqnv7xG4Xj__3IfbLYglCaNbvmAblliiWynBXOAf9S0w3q00J9vH2JLFwrpVAvkyKjW6elZ1gy3blJocix9cRg-S3PP0AxP7GmpaVHUFmojJcZlT4Vt6anBc2KHD7PoHbo_RX9aKoZfaGhRyGnoVPdz_OL0PlALx-Sw-23B6-HQVuzIdBI1B6kSQpahyzk2vaBc8Vj4IwPtNLW2lQg2w9S6Bnn-rA-B9eac4xqpjEIxQR7ROaKsjCPCeUJT5kWNupH2vllkEYWQOgc3KU7yBOzQminP_m1oeaQDQlzJEuQuKQrZMPr9bIfqjPMZIsH8mj8Tn6Kdne2JvuxdIJrneJla8TfZOhcMSzGztI_d6cOfDq4y93oda_gv01Dfsjws_pvYs_JneHBaE_uvR_vPiF3HUJrYz5rZG5azcxTh4Km6pnf7r8Aam8AKg
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnZ3fT9UwFMcbhcQYEkTQCCL2gRBN3OVu7e22x6FeEeRKiMgNL81p1yIhbmTemzif_B_8D_1L7Ok2uBhNjE9Lujbpevrje5qzzyFk0-13wlrFAxFpCHhiVKA0M4FSEGsmQqeg0VE8GIndY743HoxnUn01fIirCzdcGX6_xgV-mdvta2hoCT1k190m81w43Yt66OiaHIW41Q5EwJNo3Pwvi02324Y3DqJ5HNOvN1TmrFb1h83wHjntutnEmFz0phPV099-Izj-13cskcVWgtKsmTP3yS1TLJOVrHDu9-eablEfFOpv25fJwkwihXqFFBndOS89X8l0uyaFIsfSM4PJtzx9gGJ0Yk1LS0-gslAZX-eg9IG4NT0vaFbk8GkKtdPuL-ihqab0mYYehZyGznA_v_8InQf0_AE5Hr7-8HI3aDM2BBox7UGapKB1yEKubR84VzwGzvhAK22tTQWyfhCgZ5zjw_ocXGnO8U4zjUEoJthDMleUhXlEKE94yrSwUT_SziuDNLIAQufgjtxBnphVQjvzycsGzCEbBHMkS5A4pKtky5v16j1UFxjHFg_kyeiN_Bjt7-2Mj2LpKq53dpftEv4iQ-eIYSp2lv75deqkpxO73LXe9Pb9Wzfk-wwfa_9W7Sm5c_hqKN-9He0_JnedPGsvfNbJ3KSamidOAk3Uhp_svwBo2f7K
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=A+Bioarchaeological+and+Biogeochemical+Study+of+Warfare+and+Mobility+in+Andahuaylas%2C+Peru+%28ca.+ad+1160%E2%80%931260%29&rft.jtitle=International+journal+of+osteoarchaeology&rft.au=Kurin%2C+D.+S.&rft.au=Lofaro%2C+E.+M.&rft.au=G%C3%B3mez+Choque%2C+D.+E.&rft.au=Krigbaum%2C+J.&rft.date=2016-01-01&rft.issn=1047-482X&rft.eissn=1099-1212&rft.volume=26&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=93&rft.epage=103&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Foa.2398&rft.externalDBID=n%2Fa&rft.externalDocID=10_1002_oa_2398
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1047-482X&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1047-482X&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1047-482X&client=summon