Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T02:25:18.354Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

COMPARING BIOAPATITE AND COLLAGEN RADIOCARBON DATES FROM A 16TH CENTURY CEMETERY CONTEXT—EL JAPÓN, XOCHIMILCO, MEXICO CITY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2023

Edgar Alarcón Tinajero*
Affiliation:
University of Georgia, Anthropology, 355 S. Jackson Street, Baldwin Hall Rm. 250, Athens, GA 30602, USA University of Georgia, Center for Applied Isotope Studies, 120 Riverbend Road, Athens, GA 30602, USA
Carla S Hadden
Affiliation:
University of Georgia, Center for Applied Isotope Studies, 120 Riverbend Road, Athens, GA 30602, USA
Alexander Cherkinsky
Affiliation:
University of Georgia, Center for Applied Isotope Studies, 120 Riverbend Road, Athens, GA 30602, USA
*
*Corresponding author. Email: alarcon.tinajero@uga.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

El Japón is a 16th century hamlet site in the marshlands of the southern Basin of Mexico in central Mesoamerica. Radiocarbon (14C) dating and OxCal modeling of human bone collagen (n = 11) identifies a range of burials at El Japón cemetery from 1550–1650 cal. CE. The refined chronology identifies use of this rural settlement well after the onset of colonial government-sponsored relocation of Indigenous people to larger settlements (congregaciones). Historically documented information in this work supports chronological modeling beyond stand-alone calibration. Stable isotopic study of bone samples demonstrates similar sources of dietary protein and carbohydrates. The similarity of carbon sources for bone apatite (bioapatite) and collagen offers security that both bone fractions are viable 14C dating opportunities. Recent extension of this work examines bioapatite 14C dates (n = 5) from the same bone samples when quality parameters are met—atomic carbon-nitrogen ratios of 3.2–3.3 and collagen yield of 10–20%. No significant difference is found between collagen and bioapatite dates of the same individuals (p = 0.17, Mann-Whitney U test). 14C dates from human bone samples in this primarily terrestrial dietary context can be successfully acquired from either collagen or bioapatite fractions.

Type
Conference Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is used to distribute the re-used or adapted article and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
© University of Georgia, 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona

INTRODUCTION

El Japón is an archaeological hamlet site with extensive evidence of marshland agriculture in the Xochimilco area of the southern Basin of Mexico. Preliminary radiocarbon (14C) dating and OxCal modeling of human bone collagen (n = 11) identifies a range of burials at El Japón cemetery from 1550–1650 cal. CE (Alarcón Tinajero Reference Alarcón Tinajero2022; in preparation). Prior to this suite of 14C determinations, dating of El Japón site was done contextually by archaeological material distribution (cf. González Reference González1996). Archaeological remains of houses including stone foundations, daub, and utilitarian ceramics are found throughout the site of El Japón (González Reference González1996). González (Reference González1996) attributed occupation of the household sites that surround the cemetery site of El Japón to the last Postclassic cultural period (900–1521 CE) and early Colonial cultural period (1521–1821 CE) based on the preponderance of Postclassic ceramic styles. The 14C chronology presented here compares bioapatite and collagen dates from a sample of human burials from El Japón to demonstrate that a more precise estimate of cemetery use is possible via 14C dating and modeling than what is offered by estimates based on stylistic and technical ceramic designations.

14C Dating and Culture History

European colonization in Mesoamerica and North America more broadly had pervasive effects on indigenous communities. Indigenous societies in central Mesoamerica predating European contact generally formed part of state societies with extensive bureaucracies, cross-cutting ritual connections and a regional market system (Sanders et al. Reference Sanders, Parsons and Santley1979; Parsons et al. Reference Parsons, Gregg and Kintigh1983; Nichols Reference Nichols, Berdan, Nichols and Smith2017). For some communities, European colonization and settlement implied interruption or supplanting of existing political and economic structures without implying absolute cultural change (Conway 2014). Interpretation of how European colonization affected individual polities, settlements, or ethnic groups is abundant in historical and archaeological study (Jalpa Flores Reference Jalpa Flores2008; Zamudio Espinosa Reference Zamudio Espinosa2001; Santiago Cortez Reference Santiago Cortez2021). In that same approach, this study aims to contribute to the study of the early Colonial period chronology by cross-examining the utility of 14C dating and modeling of two related data sources: human bone bioapatite and bone collagen. Human remains are dated as opposed to material remains from the site due to the availability of human data from an archaeological salvage project (Ávila López Reference Ávila López1995). Consideration of the cultural context of mortuary treatment that led to the El Japón cemetery skeletal assemblage permits a contextualized understanding of the chronological span of cemetery use.

Postcontact Christian proselytism and religious conversions played a role in indigenous religious expression (Ricard 1966; Inoue Reference Inoue2007) as mortuary and burial practices shifted to be more similar to contemporaneous European Christian practices. The most prominent change is a shift towards burials in uniform body position and burial orientation similar to modern western cemeteries (Pugh et al. Reference Pugh, Sánchez and Shiratori2012; Price et al. Reference Price, Burton, Cucina, Zabala, Frei, Tykot and Tiesler2012). This specifically includes individual supine body position and consistent orientation of burials on an east–west axis. In comparison, prehispanic burials varied greatly in body position and were often interspersed in household courtyards throughout settlements. Burials at El Japón cemetery site were postulated to postdate European contact in the area (1521 AD) prior to 14C dating due to the preponderance of a cemetery pattern. El Japón burials are oriented east–west (with a slight offset), consistent with European Christian cemeteries of the time. In other Mesoamerican contexts that postdate European contact, religious influence including proselytism and European settlement predate changes in burial style (Cohen Reference Cohen, O’Connor, Danforth, Jacobi, Armstrong, Larsen and Milner1994; Wright Reference Wright2006; Graham Reference Graham2011; Warinner et al. Reference Warinner, Robles García, Spores and Tuross2012; Price et al. Reference Price, Burton, Cucina, Zabala, Frei, Tykot and Tiesler2012). El Japón burials occupy a small area: 360 m2.

14C Dating Human Bone

14C dates give an estimate of the age since formation and renewal of the bone samples that then serve as a proxy of human lifespans. Measurement and calibration of bone samples from human individuals provides an estimate of age since death, and by extension, burial. Dating and calibration of burial samples from the cemetery allows for an estimate of the use of the cemetery site and by extension an estimate of the occupation of the community. Human bone collagen primarily incorporates carbon (including 14C) from protein sources (Ambrose and Norr Reference Ambrose, Norr, Lambert and Grupe1993) as opposed to carbohydrates or lipids in diet. Bioapatite, in turn, incorporates carbon from the amalgam of carbon sources in the total diet: all macronutrients including carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins (Ambrose and Norr Reference Ambrose, Norr, Lambert and Grupe1993). Dietary proteins and carbohydrates are demonstrated to differentially route to bone protein (collagen) and mineral (bioapatite) (Ambrose and Norr Reference Ambrose, Norr, Lambert and Grupe1993). Bone mass is acquired and conserved in the years leading to skeletal maturity which oscillates around 19–25 years of age (Hedges et al. 2007). Turnover rates vary within individuals when comparing bioapatite and collagen but potentially on a scale too small to be of influence for 14C dating (Tsutaya and Yoneda Reference Tsutaya and Yoneda2013).

Carbon dietary sources from human diets must be considered to adequately consider the trophic and geographic origin of foods. Archaeological evidence of substantial marine food consumption would require a 14C approach distinct from a terrestrial dietary context. As an example: a cultural and material archaeological context in a coastal settlement (Naito et al. Reference Naito, Chikaraishi, Ohkouchi, Mukai, Shibata, Honch, Dodo, Ishida, Amano and Ono2010) gives a preliminary indication that 14C dated individuals consumed marine foods. Conversely, dietary protein sources in Postclassic central Mesoamerica included domestic crops and animals, wild game, and wild terrestrial or freshwater foods (Valadez Azúa and Rodríguez Galicia 2014; Moreiras Reynaga et al. 2020). Stable isotopic study of bone samples from El Japón (n = 74) demonstrates sources of dietary protein and carbohydrates similar to other central Mesoamerican samples (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022). At El Japón, more than 50% of dietary protein and more than 70% of dietary carbohydrates came from C4 sources (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022). El Japón residents had a very restricted diet in comparison to other agricultural communities of the Postclassic and Colonial periods, consuming largely domestic crops with resulting low trophic levels (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022). The same diet models (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022) support an interpretation that marine foods formed no major portion of diet for the sampled individuals.

Geologic origins of consumed foods and geologic contexts of taphonomic environments of archaeological samples must be considered in addition to diet-based variation in carbon sources. In other geologic regions, limestone contribution to sediments and their disintegration in bodies of water are known sources of dissolved inorganic carbon that affect either bone sample preservation or 14C age determinations of organisms procuring water or foods from bodies of water with dissolved carbon (Gustafsson et al. Reference Gustafsson, van Dongen, Vonk, Dudarev and Semiletov2011; Schulting et al. Reference Schulting, Bronk Ramsey, Bazaliiskii and Weber2015; Svyatko et al. Reference Svyatko, Reimer and Schulting2017; Hadden and Cherkinsky Reference Hadden and Cherkinsky2017). It is unlikely that dissolved geological carbonate played a role in carbon cycling in Lake Xochimilco because most of the Basin Mexico lies on igneous bedrock (de Cserna Reference de Cserna1989; López-Acosta et al. Reference López-Acosta, Espinosa-Santiago and Barba-Galdámez2019). The soils at El Japón site where burials took place are primarily andosols with overlying technosols (McClung de Tapia and Acosta Ochoa Reference McClung de Tapia and Acosta Ochoa2015) and can be assumed to have low levels of carbonates in comparison to minerals and inclusions typical of those soil types. Perennially wet soils at El Japón may have supported gradual microbial decomposition without contributing to a particularly aggressive chemical deterioration of bioapatite. Terrestrial dietary carbon sources at El Japón established through dietary modeling together with consideration of carbon cycling and soil types offer security that both bioapatite and collagen fractions are viable 14C dating opportunities.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Sampling

14C dating in this study was carried out on a random stratified sample of human bone taken from burials of lower cemetery strata. The cemetery strata were defined at the time of excavation in approximately 10-cm increments. Layers 11–8 are grouped as lower layers, and these begin lower than the foundations of the only architecture in the cemetery area (Figure 2). Burials in upper layers (7–4) are far fewer in number and generally occupy space open between earlier burials. Samples were taken for both 14C dating (this work) and stable isotope analysis (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022). Fibulae, radii, or ribs were selected from each individual because sufficiently thick cortical bone could be taken with minimally invasive methods. These samples were existing fragments or sampled from portions of bone that are not diagnostic for sex and age estimates, or for evaluation of pathologies. This work specifically examines bioapatite 14C dates (n = 5) from concomitant collagen samples with adequate quality parameters—atomic carbon-nitrogen ratios of 3.2–3.3 and collagen yield of 10–20%.

Figure 1 Location of El Japón archaeological site in the southern Basin of Mexico. Maximum estimated extent of anthropogenic agricultural islands (chinampas) in the southern Basin of Mexico is filled iconographically (Armillas Reference Armillas1971). Map modified from an image with a Free Art License (YAVIDAXIU 2007). Physical Map of Mexico marking the general area of the southern Basin of Mexico (Addicted04 2011).

Figure 2 Lower stratigraphy burials (Layers 11–8), shallower burials in Layers 7–4 are not mapped here. Burials in ellipses are 14C dated individuals. The map is adapted from Ávila López (Reference Ávila López1995).

Figure 3 Model 3 Plot. Mean values are marked with “○”. 68.3% and 95.4% ranges are marked with brackets.

Collagen Sample Preparation

Sample preparation began with inspection for adhesives using UV light. Samples were sonicated in three consecutive acetone baths then rinsed and soaked in (Milli-Q) ultrapure water to neutrality. Cortical bone surface was removed by abrasion. Collagen isolation follows a modified Longin (Reference Longin1971) procedure. Procedure modification introduces a base step (Haynes 1968; Gurfinkel Reference Gurfinkel1987). The acid-base-acid procedure dissolves adsorbed organic material and bone mineral to isolate biogenic collagen. Stable isotope samples (δ13C and δ15N) were analyzed in a Thermo Fisher elemental analyzer isotope ratio mass spectrometer. Carbon-nitrogen atomic ratios and percent collagen yield (van Klinken Reference van Klinken1999) were calculated as a measure of collagen preservation. Those results supported a preliminary dietary interpretation that contextualize 14C interpretation (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022). Carbon-nitrogen atomic ratios (C:N ratio; Ambrose Reference Ambrose1990) were calculated to gauge success of collagen purification. Purified collagen samples were selected for 14C dating when atomic C:N ranged 3.2–3.3, indicating low diagenetic alteration to molecular structure in the depositional environment (DeNiro and Hastorf 1985).

Bioapatite Sample Preparation

Bioapatite 14C samples were selected from collagen 14C-dated bone with adequate collagen preservation (10–21% yield and 2.9–3.5 C:N) making the sample a systematic sample. Bone samples for bioapatite analysis were sonicated three times in (Milli-Q) ultrapure water in 30–minute increments to remove any sediment not removed by abrasive cleaning. The remaining bioapatite pretreatment procedure follows Cherkinsky (Reference Cherkinsky2009). The procedure uses acetic acid to remove secondary carbonates that may otherwise react during acidification. Samples were acidified with 100% phosphoric acid (H3PO4) and heated for 12 hours at 50ºC before analysis in a Thermo Gas Bench coupled to a Delta V isotope ratio mass spectrometer (IRMS) at the Center for Applied Isotope Studies (CAIS). Separate aliquots of solid, pretreated sample were acidified in evacuated reaction vessels and the reaction products were cryogenically purified to recover CO2. CO2 samples were cryogenically purified from the other reaction products and catalytically converted to graphite using the method of Vogel et al. (Reference Vogel, Southon, Nelson and Brown1984). Graphite 14C/13C ratios were measured using the CAIS 0.5 MeV accelerator mass spectrometer. Sample ratios were compared to the ratios measured from the Oxalic Acid I standard (NBS SRM 4990).

14C Date Calibration and Modeling

Demonstrated low-trophic level terrestrial diets of El Japón individuals (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022) justified use of an atmospheric calibration curve to calibrate human bone 14C dates: both collagen and bioapatite. Dates are calibrated using the North American IntCal20 Curve (Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards and Friedrich2020) using OxCal 4.4 (https://c14.arch.ox.ac.uk/) software. OxCal 4.4 software was also used to create and test chronological models. Bayesian statistics express the degree of belief in models created with contextual information independent of the 14C age determinations (Hamilton and Krus 2017). Contextual information may include stratigraphic information that relates dated objects or individuals to each other. OxCal agreement indices (Aagreement and Aoverall) are used to evaluate the agreement between the 14C data and the model, with Aagreement = 60 and Aoverall = 60 being the thresholds of acceptable agreement (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey1995). The following OxCal functions are used to constrain the date distributions: Phase, Sequence, and C_Date. A C_Date, or calendar date within a Sequence constrains modeled calibrated dates (Thompson et al. Reference Thompson, Jefferies and Moore2018) to postdate or predate a calendar year. A C_Date is selected and justified by information independent of the 14C age determinations. A typical example may include a dated coin in an archaeological deposit providing the earliest date a deposit of associated artifacts may have taken place.

The year 1521 is used as a Calendar date in the included models to constrain modeled dates not tied to a particular dateable object but to the region-wide pattern of European arrival and dispersal beginning with armed conflict in the Basin of Mexico in 1521 CE (Díaz del Castillo Reference Díaz del Castillo2003). Burial treatment of all undisturbed burials at El Japón are consistent with European Christian cemetery style—individual supine burials arranged with an east–west orientation. This pattern is not common in postclassic sites. El Japón’s mortuary treatment pattern is consistent with a period postdating European influence in Mesoamerica. Models 1 and 2 (Supplemental Material) calibrate collagen and bioapatite dates separately. Model 3 (Supplemental Material) combines bioapatite and collagen dates testing the agreement of bioapatite and collagen dates on the same individuals using a χ2 test as implemented in the R_Combine function.

RESULTS

Quality indicators of all purified collagen samples—C:N ratio and collagen yields—are within acceptable range (Table 1). Burial 50 has the lowest collagen yield at 11% though this is still within acceptable range (cf. 2–22% collagen yield; Ambrose Reference Ambrose1990). The role of Burial 50 in Bayesian models is discussed for each model. Unmodeled 14C dates are broadly consistent with a hypothesized late Postclassic/ early Colonial chronological origin (González Reference González1996) based on the material archaeological remains and features of the archaeological site of El Japón prior to any 14C analysis.

Table 1 14C dating results.

a 5% critical value, 3.8. df = 1.

b Collagen dates modeled in Model 1 (Supplemental Material). Bioapatite dates modeled in Model 2 (Supplemental Material).

DISCUSSION

The Bayesian Models

Model 1

Model 1 incorporates a Calendar date of 1521 in a Sequence prior to the burial Phase which includes collagen 14C dates only. A Calendar date command in OxCal is used in all models—requiring the model to constrain individual dates after 1521 CE. 1521 is selected as the calendar year in which European contact and the earliest possible religious influence could have occurred. Burial 50 dates (bioapatite and collagen) are consistently older than other burials. Burial 50 is flagged as an outlier in Model 1 and subsequent models to calibrate and include the datapoint but without modeling the date to fall after 1521 or affecting the rest of the model. Model 1 produces satisfactory Aagreement and Aoverall. Modeled dates span 1534–1647 (cal. CE 95.4%).

Model 2

Model 2 incorporates a Calendar date of 1521 in a Sequence prior to the burial Phase which includes bioapatite 14C dates only. These bioapatite dates are from the same individuals with dated collagen in Model 1. Like Model 1, Model 2 produces satisfactory Aagreement and Aoverall. Modeled dates span 1544–1643 (cal. CE 95.4%).

Model 3

Model 3 incorporates a Calendar date of 1521 in a Sequence prior to the burial Phase which includes combined collagen and bioapatite dates. Dates from the same individual are paired using the R_Combine function. Like Models 1 and 2, Model 3 produces acceptable Aagreement and Aoverall. Modeled dates span 1545–1640 (cal. CE 95.4%).

14C Dating of Bioapatite and Collagen

Previous work modeled the lower burial dates to 1550–1625 (cal. CE 95.4%) (Alarcón Tinajero Reference Alarcón Tinajero2022). This work uses similar modeling parameters (a calendar date of 1521) and 14C dates from bioapatite and collagen components of bone producing a slightly wider but comparable age estimate of 1545–1640 (cal. CE 95.4%). No significant difference is found between paired collagen and bioapatite dates. Burial 50 bioapatite and collagen dates differ from other burials despite similar dietary estimation as other individuals. The sample from Burial 50 could predate European contact but that interpretation would be unexpected as the burial orientation is consistent with all burials postdating European contact. Burial 50 was anatomically articulated at the time of excavation therefore lacking evidence of being a secondary burial. No current preservation parameters indicate insufficient preservation that may cause erroneous dating. Samples from burial 50 were marked as an outlier in models but not excluded.

Successful Bayesian OxCal models were achieved by independent dating of collagen (Model 1), bioapatite (Model 2), and combined collagen and bioapatite dates (Model 3). Diagenetic alteration to the materials may have been minimal enough to be adequately addressed through standard pretreatment methods. The successful AMS results from both bone fractions concur with previous findings that bioapatite can be successfully 14C dated when quality indicators are sufficient (e.g., Cherkinksy Reference Cherkinsky2009). Investment in preparation and dating of the two bone fractions however underscore estimation of dietary sources prior to 14C dating. In the case of El Japón, it is possible to rule out diagenetic alteration and marine diet as causes of 14C dates that are older than expected in a single sample: Burial 50 is not distinct in diet than any other dated individual (Alarcón Tinajero et al. Reference Alarcón Tinajero, Gómez-Valdés, Márquez Morfín and Reitsema2022).

Significance

Dating El Japón contextualizes a sample previously identified as important for the study of postcontact Indigenous population dynamics (Bullock et al. Reference Bullock, Márquez, Hernández and Ruíz2013). Bioarchaeological studies highlight the high incidence of skeletal evidence for nutritional stress and infectious disease (Márquez Morfín and Hernández Espinoza Reference Márquez Morfín and Hernández Espinoza2016; Civera Cercedo Reference Civera Cercedo2018). Nutritional stress, epidemic disease, and mortality commonly grew in magnitude or ubiquity following European colonization (Pérez Zevallos and Reyes García Reference Pérez Zevallos and Reyes García2003; Warinner et al. Reference Warinner, Robles García, Spores and Tuross2012) and as such, skeletal collections straddling or postdating European contact are important datasets. Bayesian models developed here from collagen and bioapatite fractions of bone contextualize the earliest burials of the El Japón skeletal collection and the reconstructed incidence of skeletal trauma, disease, and demography to only decades after European colonization in central Mesoamerica: 1545–1640 (cal. CE 95.4%, per Model 3). The decadal-scale modeling and discussion of Postclassic to Colonial period changes adds granularity to processes of cultural change that may otherwise be summarized as simply precontact and postcontact.

Bayesian modeling of post-contact sites in other regions of North America also elicit a more detailed image of Indigenous life and decadal-scale change following European contact. The granularity added to the chronology of El Japón fits with studies of colonial encounters elsewhere in North America that employ 14C methods to produce more precise chronological estimates. Schneider (Reference Schneider2015), for example, uses mission period records (1776–1830 CE) with 14C dates and stable isotopes on shell to demonstrate that some Indigenous communities continued traditional subsistence practices after engaging with the mission system as religious converts. More importantly, Schenider (Reference Schneider2015) uses the 14C methods to demonstrate Indigenous continuity in a landscape that may have been labeled as peripheral to Spanish colonial interests. Similarly, in northeastern North America, Bayesian modeling of 14C determinations contributes to reframing of the archaeological interpretation of Indigenous life immediately after European contact. Manning et al. (Reference Manning, Birch, Conger, Dee, Griggs and Hadden2019) cross-examine the historical record of French ventures into Iroquoian land in northeastern North America by building 14C chronologies of multiple Indigenous village sites. 14C determinations and modeling in turn facilitates interpretation of the timing of European trade goods that may not be possible without such 14C dating. Again, relying on 14C determinations, Birch et al. (Reference Birch, Manning, Sanft and Conger2021) produce estimates of defensive palisade features in northern Iroquoian settlements. 14C dating and modeling clarify the relationship between violence, defensive structures, and European arrival.

At El Japón site, characteristics of burials indicated engagement with mortuary concepts not common during the Postclassic period thus justifying independent 14C determinations. 14C determinations and calibration of dates alone produced wide calendar age estimates due to the shape of the calibration curve. Bayesian modeling of calibrated human 14C samples from El Japón chronologically contextualizes the skeletal population sample that indicates continued use of the chinampa agricultural landscape and associated mortuary practices decades after European arrival and attempts at population relocation. Additionally, this study demonstrates the utility of Bayesian modeling of 14C samples for the late Postclassic to Colonial period transition of Mesoamerica despite the challenges from reversals and plateaus of the atmospheric calibration curve.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank the Consejo de Arqueología (Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia) for permitting sampling and analyses. We thank the staff of the Laboratorio de Antropología Física at the Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia for facilitating access to samples, especially Dr. Jorge Gómez-Valdés and Perla del Carmen Ruíz Albarrán. Analyses were supported by the University of Georgia: Graduate School Dean’s Award; Department of Anthropology, Brian D. Gumbert Archaeological Graduate Research Award, Melissa Hague Field Study Award, and Janis F. Steingruber Student Travel Award, as well as by the Center for Applied Isotopes Studies Norman Herz Grant for Student Research.

COMPETING INTERESTS

The authors declare none.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2023.60

Footnotes

Selected Papers from the 24th Radiocarbon and 10th Radiocarbon & Archaeology International Conferences, Zurich, Switzerland, 11–16 Sept. 2022

References

REFERENCES

Addicted04 (username). 2011. Mexico topographic map-blank.svg. Wikimedia Commons. [accessed 2022 August 1]; https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mexico_topographic_map-blank.svg.Google Scholar
Alarcón Tinajero, E. 2022. Amid plague and conquest: assessing community continuity in Early Colonial San Gregorio Atlapulco through radiocarbon chronology. Podium presented at: 87th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology; Chicago, IL.Google Scholar
Alarcón Tinajero, E, Gómez-Valdés, JA., Márquez Morfín, L, Reitsema, LJ. 2022. A comparative isotopic approach to early Colonial Indigenous diet – El Japón, Xochimilco, Mexico. Poster presented at: 91st Annual Meeting of the American Association of Biological Anthropologists; Denver, CO.Google Scholar
Ambrose, SH. 1990. Preparation and characterization of bone and tooth collagen for isotopic analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 17(4):431451.Google Scholar
Ambrose, SH, Norr, L. 1993. Experimental evidence for the relationship of the carbon isotope ratios of whole diet and dietary protein to those of bone collagen and carbonate. In: Lambert, JB, Grupe, G, editors. Prehistoric human bone, archaeology at the molecular level. Springer. p. 137.Google Scholar
Armillas, P. 1971. Gardens on swamps. Science 174(4010):653661.Google ScholarPubMed
Ávila López, R. 1995 Proyecto de rescate arqueológico San Gregorio – Xochimilco. Manuscript on file, Dirección de Salvamento Arqueológico del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Instituto Nacional de Antrpología e Historia, México, DF.Google Scholar
Birch, J, Manning, SW, Sanft, S, Conger, MA. 2021. Refined radiocarbon chronologies for Northern Iroquoian site sequences: implications for coalescence, conflict, and the reception of European goods. American Antiquity 86(1):6189.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. 1995. Radiocarbon calibration and analysis of stratigraphy: the OxCal program. Radiocarbon 37(2):425430.Google Scholar
Bullock, M, Márquez, L, Hernández, P, Ruíz, F. 2013. Paleodemographic age-at-death distributions of two Mexican skeletal collections: a comparison of transition analysis and traditional aging methods. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 152(1):6778.Google ScholarPubMed
Cherkinsky, A. 2009. Can we get a good radiocarbon age from “bad bone”? Determining the reliability of radiocarbon age from bioapatite. Radiocarbon 51(2):647655.Google Scholar
Civera Cercedo, M. 2018. Condiciones de vida y salud en la comunidad prehispánica de San Gregorio Atlapulco, Xochimilco. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Cohen, MN, O’Connor, K, Danforth, M, Jacobi, K, and Armstrong, C. 1994. Health and death at Tipu. In: Larsen, CS, and Milner, GR, editors. In the wake of contact: biological responses to conquest. Wiley-Liss. p. 121133 Google Scholar
de Cserna, Z. 1989. An outline of the geology of Mexico. The Geology of North America–an overview. Volume A. The Geological Society of America. p. 233–264.Google Scholar
Díaz del Castillo, B. 2003. The conquest of New Spain. Penguin.Google Scholar
González, CJ. 1996. Investigaciones arqueológicas en El Japón: sitio chinampero de Xochimilco. Arqueología 16(2):8194.Google Scholar
Graham, E. 2011. Maya Christians and their churches in sixteenth-century Belize. University Press of Florida.Google Scholar
Gurfinkel, DM. 1987. Comparative study of the radiocarbon dating of different bone collagen preparations. Radiocarbon 29(1):4552.Google Scholar
Gustafsson, Ö, van Dongen, BE, Vonk, JE, Dudarev, OV, Semiletov, IP. 2011. Widespread release of old carbon across the Siberian Arctic echoed by its large rivers. Biogeosciences 8(6):17371743.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hadden, CS, Cherkinsky, A. 2017. Carbon reservoir effects in eastern oyster from Apalachicola Bay, USA. Radiocarbon 59(5):14971506.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haynes, CV. 1967. Bone organic matter and radiocarbon dating. Paper presented at the Radioactive Dating and Methods of Low-level Counting, Monaco.Google Scholar
Inoue, Y. 2007. Fundación del Pueblo, Cristiandad y Territorialidad en algunos Títulos Primordiales del centro de México. Cuadernos Canela 18:113127.Google Scholar
Jalpa Flores, T. 2008. Tierra y sociedad: la apropiación del suelo en la región de Chalco durante los siglos XV–XVII. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
Longin, R. 1971. New method of collagen extraction for radiocarbon dating. Nature 230(5291): 241242.Google ScholarPubMed
López-Acosta, NP, Espinosa-Santiago, AL, Barba-Galdámez, DF. 2019. Characterization of soil permeability in the former Lake Texcoco, Mexico. Open Geosciences 11(1):113124.Google Scholar
Manning, SW, Birch, J, Conger, MA, Dee, MW, Griggs, C, Hadden, CS. 2019. Contact-Era chronology building in Iroquoia: age estimates for Arendarhonon sites and implications for identifying Champlain’s Cahiagué. American Antiquity 84(4):684707.Google Scholar
Márquez Morfín, L, Hernández Espinoza, PO. 2016. La esperanza de vida en la ciudad de México (siglos XVI al XIX). Secuencia 4(96):644.Google Scholar
McClung de Tapia, E, Acosta Ochoa, G. 2015. Una ocupación del periodo de agricultura temprana en Xochimilco (ca. 4200–4000 ane). Anales de Antropología 49(2):299315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naito, YI, Chikaraishi, Y, Ohkouchi, N, Mukai, H, Shibata, Y, Honch, NV, Dodo, Y, Ishida, H, Amano, T, Ono, H. 2010. Dietary reconstruction of the Okhotsk culture of Hokkaido, Japan, based on nitrogen composition of amino acids: implications for correction of 14C marine reservoir effects on human bones. Radiocarbon 52(2):671681.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nichols, DL. 2017. Farm to market in the Aztec Imperial economy. In: Berdan, FF, Nichols, DL, Smith, ME, editors. Rethinking the Aztec economy. The University of Arizona Press. p. 1943.Google Scholar
Parsons, JR, Gregg, SA, Kintigh, KW. 1983. Archaeological settlement pattern data from the Chalco, Xochimilco, Ixtapalapa, Texcoco, and Zumpango regions, Mexico. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pérez Zevallos, JM, Reyes García, L. 2003. La Fundación de San Luís Tlaxialtemalco según los Títulos Primordiales de San Gregorio Atlapulco, 1519–1606. Instituto Mora.Google Scholar
Price, TD, Burton, JH, Cucina, A, Zabala, P, Frei, R, Tykot, RH, and Tiesler, V. 2012. Isotopic studies of human skeletal remains from a sixteenth to seventeenth century AD churchyard in Campeche, Mexico: diet, place of origin, and age. Current Anthropology 53(4):396433.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pugh, TW, Sánchez, JR, and Shiratori, Y. 2012. Contact and missionization at Tayasal, Petén, Guatemala. Journal of Field Archaeology 37(1):319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Austin, WEN, Bard, E, Bayliss, A, Blackwell, PG, Ramsey, CB, Butzin, M, Cheng, H, Edwards, RL, Friedrich, M, et al. 2020. The IntCal20 Northern Hemisphere radiocarbon age calibration curve (0–55 cal kBP). Radiocarbon 62(4):725757. doi: 10.1017/RDC.2020.41 Google Scholar
Ricard, R. 1974. The spiritual conquest of Mexico: an essay on the apostolate and the evangelizing methods of the Mendicant Orders in New Spain, 1523–1572. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Sanders, WT, Parsons, JR, Santley, RS. 1979. The Basin of Mexico: ecological processes in the evolution of a civilization. Academic Press.Google Scholar
Santiago Cortez, F. 2021. La participación del clero secular en las congregaciones de los pueblos de indios: el caso de Atlacomulco y San Juan de los Jarros 1592–1604. Revista de Indias 81(283):669701.Google Scholar
Schneider, TD. 2015. Envisioning colonial landscapes using mission registers, radiocarbon, and stable isotopes: an experimental approach from San Francisco Bay. American Antiquity 80(3):511529.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schulting, RJ, Bronk Ramsey, C, Bazaliiskii, VI, Weber, A. 2015. Highly variable freshwater reservoir offsets found along the Upper Lena Watershed, Cis-Baikal, southeast Siberia. Radiocarbon 57(4):581593.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Svyatko, SV, Reimer, PJ, Schulting, R. 2017. Modern freshwater reservoir offsets in the Eurasian Steppe: implications for archaeology. Radiocarbon 59(5):15971607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, VD, Jefferies, RW, Moore, CR. 2018. The case for radiocarbon dating and Bayesian analysis in historical archaeology. Historical Archaeology 53(1):181192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsutaya, T, Yoneda, M. 2013. Quantitative reconstruction of weaning ages in archaeological human populations using bone collagen nitrogen isotope ratios and approximate bayesian computation. PloS one 8:e72327. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0072327 Google ScholarPubMed
van Klinken, GJ. 1999. Bone collagen quality indicators for palaeodietary and radiocarbon measurements. Journal of Archaeological Science 26(6):687695.Google Scholar
Vogel, JS, Southon, JR, Nelson, DE, and Brown, TA. 1984. Performance of catalytically condensed carbon for use in accelerator mass spectrometry. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 5(2):289293.Google Scholar
Warinner, C, Robles García, N, Spores, R, and Tuross, N. 2012. Disease, demography, and diet in early Colonial New Spain: Investigation of a sixteenth-century Mixtec cemetery at Teposcolula Yucundaa. Latin American Antiquity 23(4):467489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, LE. 2006. Diet, health, and status among the Pasión Maya: a reappraisal of the collapse. Vanderbilt University Press.Google Scholar
YAVIDAXIU (username). 2007. Valley of Mexico c.1519-fr.svg. Wikimedia Commons. [accessed 2022 August 1]; https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Basin_of_Mexico_1519_map-en.svg.Google Scholar
Zamudio Espinosa, GY. 2001. Tierra y sociedad en el Valle de Toluca, siglo XVI. Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 Location of El Japón archaeological site in the southern Basin of Mexico. Maximum estimated extent of anthropogenic agricultural islands (chinampas) in the southern Basin of Mexico is filled iconographically (Armillas 1971). Map modified from an image with a Free Art License (YAVIDAXIU 2007). Physical Map of Mexico marking the general area of the southern Basin of Mexico (Addicted04 2011).

Figure 1

Figure 2 Lower stratigraphy burials (Layers 11–8), shallower burials in Layers 7–4 are not mapped here. Burials in ellipses are 14C dated individuals. The map is adapted from Ávila López (1995).

Figure 2

Figure 3 Model 3 Plot. Mean values are marked with “○”. 68.3% and 95.4% ranges are marked with brackets.

Figure 3

Table 1 14C dating results.

Supplementary material: File

Alarcón Tinajero et al. supplementary material

Alarcón Tinajero et al. supplementary material

Download Alarcón Tinajero et al. supplementary material(File)
File 310.8 KB