Deriving calibrations for Arawakan using archaeological evidence
Michael Lev, de Carvalho Fernando, Chacon Thiago, et. al., “Deriving calibrations for Arawakan using archaeological evidence” Interface Focus, Vol. 13, No 1, 2023, http://doi.org/10.1098/rsfs.2022.0049
This paper identifies time calibration points for accurately rooting and dating the phylogeny of Arawakan, the largest Indigenous linguistic family of the Americas. We present and model a methodology for extracting calibration points from the archaeological record, based on principles of geographical overlap between archaeological sites and Arawakan peoples, and on continuity in material culture between archaeological finds and modern Arawakan practices. Based on a consensus model of the expansion of the Arawakan family from Central Amazonia, we focus on archaeological finds in Arawakan expansion zones, where Arawakan material culture abruptly appears in a given region, and where only a single major Arawakan subgroup/clade is present. We find 12 calibration points from archaeological sites in Arawakan expansion zones and also identify more recent calibration points from the historical record based on first mentions of ethnonyms and early sources of lexical data.
|
Modeling language descent and diffusion in Amazonia 01 September 2021 - 30 June 2022 |
|