FROM DEER TO DOGS: A DYNAMIC VIEW OF SUBSISTENCE, STATUS AND
SOCIOPOLITICAL DEVELOPMENT AT CUELLO, BELIZE
Stable isotope data from the analysis of human and faunal remains
from the Preclassic Maya site of Cuello, Belize provides information
not only on subsistence strategy but also on status and gender
differences among the site's inhabitants. When examined in
chronological perspective, these data illustrate patterns in maize
consumption that may reflect genetic developments in the maize cob,
changes in agricultural productivity, and increasing social
differentation, over a time span of more than one thousand years.
Specifically, carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of bone
collagen, and carbon isotope analyses of tooth enamel and/or bone
apatite from a large sample of Cuello's 180 human burials are used to
estimate the contribution of both protein and energy sources to the
diet, and to differentiate between terrestrial and marine components.
An equally large dataset for the archaeological fauna (deer, dogs,
armadillo, peccary, turtle) and modern wildlife (including fish and
shellfish), along with the information gained from the well-preserved
botanical and faunal remains at Cuello, allows for the contextual
reconstruction of the entire food web.
These results complement the isotopic data now available from
other, mostly Classic, Maya sites. The large number of human
individuals examined from Cuello, however, provide singular spatial
and temporal control over the relationship between diet, age, sex, and
burial wealth. Long-term cultural continuity in the Maya region is
indicated by the probable consumption of maize-fed dogs at Cuello; in
contrast, ethnohistoric suggestions of taming or loose-herding deer
cannot be extended back to the Preclassic.