After several field campaigns between 2007 and 2018 in the northwestern region of the Dominican Republic, more than 300 archaeological sites have been registered and revisited. While several of... Show moreAfter several field campaigns between 2007 and 2018 in the northwestern region of the Dominican Republic, more than 300 archaeological sites have been registered and revisited. While several of these sites were identified through the scatter of surface material culture, others show terrain modifications in the form of anthropogenic mounds and levelled areas. Researchers have gathered valuable information regarding these features’ functionality and construction processes through large-scale excavations in archaeological sites with anthropogenic mounds, paleoenvironmental studies and remote sensing analyses. These anthropogenic mounds represent a long-term process of formation and were used for a variety of purposes ranging from agricultural to ritual activities. While excavations and small-scale remote sensing can provide a myriad of data to improve our understanding of these archaeological sites, a regional perspective is needed to map the relationship among archaeological sites with and without terrain modifications, to better understand the Indigenous cultural patterns in their regional environment. In this regard, the primary objective of this paper is to explore to what extent these archaeological sites were related to the environment and each other. This was achieved by correlating archaeological data with a set of archaeologically recognized important environmental variables using advanced spatial statistics. The results provide important insights to understand the underlying pattern of archaeological sites in this region and its relationship with the environmental setting. Show less
The early colonial period witnessed new scales of connectivity and unprecedented projects of resource extraction across the Spanish Americas. Yet such transformations also drew heavily on... Show moreThe early colonial period witnessed new scales of connectivity and unprecedented projects of resource extraction across the Spanish Americas. Yet such transformations also drew heavily on preexisting Indigenous landscapes, technologies, and institutions. Drawing together recent discussions in archaeology and geography about mobility and resource materialities, this article takes the early colonial route as a central object of investigation and contributes to new emerging interpretive frameworks that make sense of Spanish colonialism in the Americas as a variable, large-scale, and materially constituted process. Using three case studies—the ruta de Colón on the island of Hispaniola, the routes connecting the southeastern Caribbean islands with mainland South America, and the ruta de la plata in the south-central Andes—we develop a comparative archaeological analysis that reveals divergent trajectories of persistence, appropriation, and erasure in the region's routes and regimes of extraction and mobility during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Show less
En la historiografía y la arqueología dominicana la trascendencia de la región norte ha estado tradicionalmente ligada a su condición de escenario de importantes acontecimientos vinculados con los... Show moreEn la historiografía y la arqueología dominicana la trascendencia de la región norte ha estado tradicionalmente ligada a su condición de escenario de importantes acontecimientos vinculados con los inicios de la colonización europea (Arranz Marquez 1991; Cassa 1992; Deagan y Cruxent 2002; Guerrero y Veloz Maggiolo 1988; Ortega 1988; Wilson 1992). Al margen de los aportes que esa visión ha generado, la misma ha contribuido a trazar esquemas importantes en los estudios arqueológicos, sobre todo, al incidir en la prioridad de ciertos temas; la forma en que estos han sido abordados, así como los escenarios propicios para su investigación. En este artículo revisamos algunas de estas nociones y proporcionamos evidencias para entender la conquista del norte, principalmente desde la perspectiva indígena. Show less
The northern region of Hispaniola is one the most referenced areas in Caribbean archaeology and historiography. Nevertheless, its central presence in textbooks belies a lack of understanding in... Show moreThe northern region of Hispaniola is one the most referenced areas in Caribbean archaeology and historiography. Nevertheless, its central presence in textbooks belies a lack of understanding in both disciplines of the complex history of the region. The research presented here reassesses the interactions that occurred among the multiform indigenous communities (Meillacoid and Chicoid) that inhabited the region during the pre-Columbian period. A focus on these interactions forms the basis of an approach that can differentiate this region from others on Hispaniola and the Western Caribbean. It also links this research to recent Pan-Caribbean approaches, such as those employed by the Caribbean Research Group at the University of Leiden. As a result this research attempts to go beyond the traditional diachronic studies used in indigenous archaeology and rather will take a synchronic perspective. This highlights such issues as inter-group communication, competency, transculturation and syncretism that emerge from the Caribbean pre-Columbian multicultural mosaic. All of this is derived from an in-depth study of the cultural landscape in northern Hispaniola and nuances in material culture expressions, especially ceramic formal and stylistic traditions. Show less