Authors
Pablo A Marquet, Calogero M Santoro, Claudio Latorre, Vivien G Standen, Sebastián R Abades, Marcelo M Rivadeneira, Bernardo Arriaza, Michael E Hochberg
Publication date
2012/9/11
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
109
Issue
37
Pages
14754-14760
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The emergence of complex cultural practices in simple hunter-gatherer groups poses interesting questions on what drives social complexity and what causes the emergence and disappearance of cultural innovations. Here we analyze the conditions that underlie the emergence of artificial mummification in the Chinchorro culture in the coastal Atacama Desert in northern Chile and southern Peru. We provide empirical and theoretical evidence that artificial mummification appeared during a period of increased coastal freshwater availability and marine productivity, which caused an increase in human population size and accelerated the emergence of cultural innovations, as predicted by recent models of cultural and technological evolution. Under a scenario of increasing population size and extreme aridity (with little or no decomposition of corpses) a simple demographic model shows that dead individuals may have …
Total citations
20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320244141412122112914209114
Scholar articles
PA Marquet, CM Santoro, C Latorre, VG Standen… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012