Water Folk

Reconstructing an Ancient Aquatic Lifeway in Michoacán, Western Mexico

Written by Eduardo Williams

36.0045.60

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Print Book
ISBN: 9781407312521
BAR: S2617
45.60
PDF eBook
ISBN: 9781407342191
BAR: S2617E
36.00
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Description

This study of subsistence activities (fishing, hunting, gathering, and manufacture) in the Cuitzeo and Pátzcuaro lake basins (Michoacán, Western Mexico) underscores the value of ethnoarchaeology as a tool for reconstructing the ancient aquatic lifeway in the territory of the Protohistoric Tarascan state (ca. AD 1450-1530), which flourished in an environment dominated by lakes, rivers, swamps and marshes. Mesoamerica was the only civilization in the ancient world that lacked major domesticated sources of animal protein; therefore, abundant wild aquatic species (fish, birds, reptiles, amphibians, insects and plants, etc.) all played strategic roles in the diet and economy of most Mesoamerican cultures, including the Tarascans.