The World Between Us
The Hohokam of the Tucson Basin and the Trincheras tradition of northern Sonora were contemporaneous agricultural societies that inhabited the Sonoran Desert between approximately AD 450 and 1450. These groups shared several cultural traits, including the construction of shallow pithouses, the creation of shell jewelry, and the use of irrigation agriculture. Despite these similarities, they maintained distinct ceramic traditions, settlement styles, and social structures.Cremation served as the primary mortuary custom for both traditions. This practice was a complex, multi-stage ritual where the actual burning of the body was only one phase. Forensic analysis of recovered remains indicates that both groups utilized efficient pyrotechnology, reaching temperatures above 600°C to produce white, calcined bone fragments. After the fire, the remains were typically collected and placed in secondary deposits, such as ceramic urns or pits.A fundamental difference between the two traditions lies in how they remembered and commemorated the dead. Hohokam mortuary practices emphasized a strong connection to the deceased within small, nuclear social groups. Their burials were often located in small cemeteries adjacent to residential structures or even under the floors of rooms, providing a constant link between the living and their specific lineage. In contrast, the Trincheras people at the Cerro de Trincheras site focused on a collective social identity. They utilized a massive, highly visible communal urn-field cemetery at the base of their terraced hill, where individual differences were minimized in favor of a unified ancestral group.While cremation was dominant, inhumation was also practiced in both regions, though less frequently. Among the Hohokam, infants were often inhumed rather than cremated, which suggests that social personhood may have been acquired gradually as an individual aged. For adults, inhumation may have been a way to display specific social or economic relationships through the placement of varied burial objects. At Cerro de Trincheras, inhumations found on the hill itself might have served to socially differentiate those individuals from the thousands buried in the communal cemetery below.In the modern era, the discovery of prehistoric remains in the Arizona desert continues to occur due to natural erosion, land development, and even amateur searches for missing persons. These remains are now protected by state and federal laws, including Arizona Revised Statutes 41-844 and 41-865, and the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). These regulations prohibit the looting of funerary features and require that human remains be handled with dignity and respect.When ancestral remains are identified as Native American, they are often repatriated to descendant communities such as the Tohono O’odham Nation. The tribe coordinates the return of these ancestors and their associated funerary objects, which may have previously been held in museum collections for decades. The Tohono O’odham perform reburial ceremonies to restore their ancestors to the earth in secure, secret locations, ensuring they are no longer treated as scientific specimens but as treasured heritage. These ongoing efforts represent a significant advance in human rights, returning the control of ancestral legacies to the Native communities themselves. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-world-between-us--6886561/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-world-between-us--6886561/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].
543 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The World Between Us!