Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T10:06:11.421Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hydraulics, Cacao, and Complex Developments at Preclassic Chocolá, Guatemala: Evidence and Implications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Jonathan Kaplan*
Affiliation:
Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá (PACH)/Research Associate, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology, 3260 South Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6324 (jonathan_kaplan2005@yahoo.com)

Abstract

Investigations begun in 2003 and continued through 2005 at Chocolá, in Southwestern Guatemala, have determined the existence of an extensive Preclassic network of well-engineered subterranean canals. The hydraulics discovered at the site, as well as other findings, add to long-standing evidence of Preclassic developments in the site's immediate region. While I consider an impressive Preclassic hydraulic system proven for Chocolá, a similarly early industry of cacao—a high-water demand plant of pan-Mesoamerican importance and native to the region—is discussed here admittedly only as a plausible hypothesis, based on copious ethnohistoric attestation but also on the long-known but disparate evidence of a temporal priority to many developments considered key to later Classic Maya civilization that are found in the Southern Maya area.

Resumen

Resumen

Las investigaciones realizadas en Chocolá, en el Suroeste Guatemalteco, dieron inicio en 2003 y continuaron hasta el 2005, determinando la existencia de un extenso sistema hidráulico de buena manufactura que consiste en canales que funcionaron tanto subterráneamente como en la superficie. Este sistema, junto a otros hallazgos aporta a la evidencia del alto y temprano desarrollo en la región inmediata de la Bocacosta. Nuestros descubrimientos parecen confirmar el importante y temprano papel del área Maya del Sur en la trayectoria Maya. El impresionante sistema hidráulico de Chocolá ha sido documentado arqueológicamente. Nuestra búsqueda de una industria preclásica del cacao permanece como una hipótesis valida, dado el potencial que aporta el sistema hidráulico como generador de desarrollos considerados esenciales para la civilización Maya Clásica, cuyos antecedentes han sido documentados en el área Maya del Sur.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Acuña, Rene 1982 Relaciones Geográficas del Sigh XVI: Guatemala. Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, serie Antropológica 45. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Bergmann, John F. 1969 The Distribution of Cacao Cultivation in Pre-Columbian America. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 59(1):8596.Google Scholar
Burkitt, Robert 1930 Excavations at Chocolá. The Museum Journal 21:540.Google Scholar
Carrasco, Pedro 1982 Sobre los indios de Guatemala. In Seminario de Integratión Social Guatemalteca, pp. 42:8995. Editorial José de Pineda Ibarra, Ministerio de Educatión, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Chinchilla, Oswaldo 2002 Palo Gordo, Guatemala, y el estilo artístico Cotzumalguapa. In Incidents of Archaeology in Central America and Yucatán: Essays in Honor of Edwin M. Shook, edited by Michael Love, Marion Popenoe de Hatch, and Héctor Escobedo, pp. 147178. University Press of America, Lanham.Google Scholar
Chinchilla, Oswaldo 2006 Investigatión Arqueológica en Cotzumalguapa, Guatemala. Report delivered to the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc. Electronic document, http://www.famsi.org/reports/99053es/index.html, accessed September 1, 2006.Google Scholar
Fuentes, y Guzmón, Francisco Antonio de 1932–33 Recordación florida: discurso historial, demostración material, militar y política del reyno de Goathemala. Tipografia Nacional, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Gage, Thomas 1958 Travels in the New World. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Gasco, Janine L. 1993 Población y economía en el Soconusco durante el siglo XVI: El ejemplo del pueblo de Guilocingo, 1582. Mesoamerica 20:249265.Google Scholar
Gasco, Janine L. 1996 Cacao and Economic Inequality in Colonial Soconusco, Chiapas, Mexico. Journal of Anthropological Research 52(4):385409.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gasco, Janine L. 2003 Soconusco. In The Mesoamerican Postclassic World, edited by Michael E. Smith and Frances F. Berdan, pp. 282296. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Gasco, Janine, and Voorhies, Barbara 1989 The Ultimate Tribute: The Role of Soconusco as an Aztec Tributary. In Ancient Trade and Tribute: Economics of the Soconusco Region of Mesoamerica; edited by Barbara Voorhies, pp. 4894. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Gómez-Pompa, A., Flores, J. S., and Fernandez, M. A. 1990 The Sacred Cacao Groves of the Maya. Latin American Antiquity 1(3):247257.Google Scholar
Green, Harold H. 2007 Cosmic Order at Chocolá: Implications of Solar Observations at the Horizon at Chocolá, Suchitepéquez, Guatemala. Paper presented at the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Austin.Google Scholar
Grofe, Michael D. 2005 Up From Xibalbá: Death and Rebirth and the Symbolism of Cacao in the Popol Vuh. Invited presentation at the 23rd Annual University of Pennsylvania Maya Weekend, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Jones, Christopher 1986 A Ruler in Triumph: Chocola Monument 1. Expedition 28:312.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 1995 The Incienso Throne, and Other Thrones from Kaminaljuyú, Guatemala: Late Preclassic Examples of a Mesoamerican Throne Tradition. Ancient Mesoamerica 6:185196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 2000 Monument 65: A Great Emblematic Depiction of Throned Rule and Royal Sacrifice at Late Preclassic Kaminaljuyú. Ancient Mesoamerica 11:185198.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 2002a From Under the Volcanoes: Some Aspects of the Ideology of Rulership at Late Preclassic Kaminaljuyu. In Incidents of Archaeology: Essays in Honor of Edwin P. Shook, edited by Michael Love, Marion Popenoe de Hatch, and Hector Escobedo, pp. 311357. University Press of America, Lanham, Maryland.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 2002b Urbanism, Rulership, and Ethnic Interaction at Kaminaljuyu in the Late Preclassic. Paper presented at the 2002 Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, New Orleans.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 2005a The Hubris of Cacao: Some Speculations about the Rise of Social and Cultural Complexity in the Maya Trajectory in the Guatemalan Bocacosta at the Site of Chocola. Invited paper presented at the 23rd Annual University of Pennsylvania Maya Weekend, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 2005b Cacao and the Origins of Maya Civilization. Invited talk at the California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 2005c Investigaciones recientes en Chocolá: La bocacosta Guatemalteca, Desarrollo Hidráulico, Cacao y la génesis de los desarrollos seminales de la civilizatión Maya. Invited paper presented at a mesa redonda at the XIX Simposio de Arqueología Guatemalteca, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan 2008 K’aminaljuyu: Corpse and Corpus Delicti. In The Southern Maya in the Late Preclassic: Urbanism, Rulership, and Ethnic Interaction, edited by Michael Love and Jonathan Kaplan. Volume in preparation for publication.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan, and Rivera, Rene Ugarte (editors) 2006 Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá: Informe No. 3, Tercera Temporada 2005. Report presented to the Instituto de Antropologia e Historia, Dirección General de Patrimonio Cultural Natural de Guatemala, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan, and Valdés, Juan Antonio 2004 Chocolá, an Apparent Regional Capital in the Southern Maya Preclassic: Preliminary Findings of the Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá (PACH). Mexicon XXVI (4):7786.Google Scholar
Kaplan, Jonathan, Valdés, Juan Antonio and Umaña, Federico Paredes (editors) 2004 Proyecto Arqueológico Chocolá: Informe No. 2: Segunda Temporada 2004. Report presented to the Instituto de Antropologia e Historia, Dirección General de Patrimonio Cultural Natural de Guatemala Guatemala, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Malmström, Vincent H. 1978 A Reconstruction of the Chronology of Mesoamerican Calendrical Systems. Journal for the History of Astronomy 9:105.Google Scholar
Marcus, Joyce 2006 The Roles of Ritual and Technology in Mesoamerican Water Management. In Agricultural Strategies, edited by Charles Stanish and Joyce Marcus, pp. 221254. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Marroquín, Elizabeth 2005 El Manejo del Agua en Tak’alik Ab’aj, Retalhuleu: La Evidencia de Canales Prehispánicos. In XVIII Simposio de Investigaciones A rqueológicas en Guatemala, edited by Juan Pedro Laporte, Bárbara Arroyo, and Héctor E. Mejía, pp. 9971008. Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes, Instituto de Antropología e Historia/Asociación Tikal/Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc., Guatemala.Google Scholar
McBryde, Felix Webster 1947 Cultural and Historical Geography of Southwest Guatemala. Smithsonian Institution Institute of Social Anthropology Publication No. 4, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Paredes Umaña, Federico 2005 Las Esculturas de Chocolá, Suchitepéquez. Unpublished licenciatura thesis, Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Escuela de Historia, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Paredes, Federico, Cossich, Margarita, Belches, Diana, Kaplan, Jonathan, and Valdés, Juan Antonio 2005 Un Sistema de Manejo de Aguas en el Grupo Norte de Chocolá, Suchitepéquez. In XVIII Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, edited by Juan Pedro Laporte, Bárbara Arroyo, and Hector E. Mejía, pp. 989996. Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes, Instituto de Antropología e Historia/Asociación Tikal/Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc., Guatemala.Google Scholar
Parsons, Lee Allen 1967 Bilbao, Guatemala: An Archaeological Study of the Pacific Coast Cotzumalhuapa Region. 2 vols. Publications in Anthropology 11, Milkwaukee Public Museum, Milwaukee.Google Scholar
Powis, Terry G., Valdez, Fred Jr., Hester, Thomas R., Jeffrey Hurst, W., and Tarka, Stanley M. Jr. 2002 Spouted Vessels and Cacao Use Among the Classic Maya. Latin American Antiquity 13:85106.Google Scholar
Popenoe de Hatch, Marion, de Lavarreda, Christa Schieber, Rezzio, Edgar Carpio, Corzo, Miguel Orrego, Paredes, José Hector, and Wolley, Claudia 2000 Observaciones sobre el desarrollo cultural en Takalik Abaj, Departamento de Retalhuleu, Guatemala. In XIII Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, 1999, edited by Juan Pedro Laporte, Héctor L. Escobedo, Ana Claudia de Suasnávar, and Bárbara Arroyo, pp. 159170. Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, Guatemala; Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología.Google Scholar
Recinos, Adrián 1984 Crónicas Indígenas de Guatemala. Academia de Geografía e Historia de Guatemala, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Sapper, Karl 1897 Das nordliche Mittel-Amerika. Nebst einem Ausflug nach dem Hochlandvon Anahuac-reisen und Studien aus den Jahren 1888–1895. Braunschweig.Google Scholar
Scarborough, Vernon L. 2003 The Flow of Power: Ancient Water Systems and Landscapes. SAR Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Schieber de Lavarreda, Christa, and Corzo, Miguel Orrego 2001a Abaj Takalik a través de los siglos: Excavaciones y Descubrimientos. Proyecto Nacional Takalik Abaj, Ministerio de Cultural y Deportes/IDAEH, Arq. Antonio Prado, Fundación G & T, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Schieber de Lavarreda, Christa, and Corzo, Miguel Orrego 2001b Mil años de historia en Abaj Takalik. Utz’ib, Asociación Tikal, Proyecto Nacional Takalik Abaj, Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes/IDAEH, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Schieber de Lavarreda, Christa, and Corzo, Miguel Orrego 2001c Abaj Takalik. Fundación G & T Continental, Guatemala.Google Scholar
Schieber de Lavarreda, Christa, and Corzo, Miguel Orrego 2001d Los Senderos Milenarios de Abaj Takalik: Guiía del Parque. Ministerio de Cultura y Depones, Dirección General del Patrimonio Natural/IDAEH, Proyecto Nacional Abaj Takalik.Google Scholar
Taube, Karl A. 1985 The Classic Maya Maize God: A Reappraisal. In Fifth Palenque Roundtable, 1983, edited by Virginia M. Fields, pp. 171182. Precolumbian Art Institute, San Francisco.Google Scholar
Taube, Karl A. 1992 Major Gods of Yucatan. Dumbarton Oaks Library and Collection, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Taube, Karl A. 1996 Antiguos Dioses Mayas. Arqueología Mexicana 4(20):2029.Google Scholar
Taube, Karl A. 2004 Flower Mountain: Concepts of Life, Beauty, and Paradise among the Classic Maya. Res 45:6998.Google Scholar
Termer, Franz 1973 Palo Gordo: Ein Beitrag zur Archäologie des Pazifischen Guatemala. Monographien zur Völkerkunde. Herausgegeben vom Hamburischen Museum für Völkerkunde 8, Kommissionsverlag Klaus Renner, München.Google Scholar