Isotopic Investigations of Dietary Dichotomies: the Importance of Maize and Marine Foods to Initial
Period/Early Horizon Subsistence in Highland and Coastal Peru
The relationship between food production and the development of complex societies has been
an important focus of anthropological research in Peru, where maize traditionally was assumed to
have been an important staple crop for Chavín civilization (ca. 850-200 BC) along the coast and in
the highlands. Recent macrobotanical and chemical investigations have raised doubts about this
hypothesis.
In this study the relative contributions of maize and marine resources to pre-Hispanic
Peruvian diet was determined through stable isotope analysis of human bone collagen and apatite
from Pacopampa in highland northern Peru, and Cardal and Tablada de Lurin in the Lurin Valley
on the central coast. Measurement of 13C in apatite, which reflects the whole diet, is now
recognized as an essential complement to 13C and 15N determinations for collagen, which represent
only dietary protein, especially when both maize and marine foods may have been consumed. Hair
segments from Mina Perdida, near the coast, are being analyzed to assess short-term or seasonal
variations in diet.
The Pacopampa results are consistent with data from Chavín de Huantar and Huaricoto
indicating that maize was of secondary importance in highland subsistence systems during the Initial
Period and Early Horizon. Near the coast in Lurin, marine foods were dietary staples, while maize
consumption increased during the first millenium B.C. These dietary reconstructions are important
for understanding the development of intensive agricultural systems in coastal and highland Peru,
and the complex relationship between the subsistence economy and the emergence of early
civilizations.