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Obsidian source characterization in the Cordillera Real and eastern piedmont of the north Ecuadorian Andes
Authors:Charles L.F. Knight,Andrea M. Cué  llar,Michael D. Glascock,Minard L. Hall,Patricia A. Mothes
Affiliation:1. Consulting Archaeology Program, 111 Delehanty Hall, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405, USA;2. Department of Anthropology, University of Lethbridge, 4401 University Drive, Lethbridge, AB T1K3M4, Canada;3. Archaeometry Laboratory, University of Missouri Research Reactor, 1513 Research Park Drive, Columbia, MO 65211, USA;4. Instituto Geofísico, Escuela Politécnica Nacional, Casilla 1701-2759, Quito, Ecuador
Abstract:Recent research in the Quijos and Cosanga valleys of the eastern piedmont of Ecuador’s Cordillera Real has revealed and substantiated previous knowledge of obsidian sources that are unrelated to obsidian flow systems in the Sierra de Guamaní, Ecuador. Neutron Activation Analysis (NAA) and X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) were carried out on 47 obsidian source samples collected from several contexts in and adjacent to the study area. From samples within the study area three distinct obsidians were characterized: Cosanga A, Cosanga B, and Bermejo. These obsidians originate from a number of obsidian-bearing rhyolitic domes recently identified in the hills west of the Río Cosanga. Extensive survey of these dome localities has identified obsidian cobbles large enough for formal and informal tool manufacture. Beyond the study area, samples were collected and analyzed from the El Tablón source in the Sierra de Guamaní, providing much needed data on this poorly understood source. In addition, a sample from the newly identified Conda Dome source, near the Cotopaxi volcano, was characterized with XRF. All samples were then compared to 57 pre-existing samples from the Mullumica–Callejones, Yanaurco–Quiscatola and Carboncillo sources in the Ecuadoran Cordillera Real, as well as to artifacts from the Sumaco area in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Results of the elemental characterization indicate that the Cosanga Valley, El Tablón and Conda Dome obsidians are chemically distinct. Further, visual characteristics of Cosanga Valley obsidian types are useful in source attribution for the large artifact samples from the region. Finally, obsidian collected from the El Tablón flow suggests that this source may have produced obsidian suitable for tool manufacture.
Keywords:Obsidian provenance   Obsidian procurement   XRF and NAA   Quijos   Ecuador   Andes
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