The Maya raised and traded dogs and other animals, likely for ceremonial use, new research shows.
Police detectives analyze isotopes in human hair to find out where a murder victim was born and grew up. The coauthors of the new study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences combined clues from carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and strontium isotope analysis to investigate the lives of Maya dogs.
“In Asia, Africa, and Europe, animal management went hand-in-hand with the development of cities,” says lead author Ashley Sharpe, an archaeologist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. “But in the Americas, people may have raised animals for ceremonial purposes. The growth of cities doesn’t seem to be directly tied to animal husbandry.”
The researchers found that animal trade and management began in the Preclassic Period some 2,500 years ago and intensified during the Classic Period, making it likely that organized ceremonies involving animal and human sacrifice and raising animals for food played important roles in the development of Maya civilization.
Wild or domestic diets
Isotopes are atoms that have the same number of protons and electrons but different numbers of neutrons, and therefore have different physical properties. For example, carbon has two stable isotopes: carbon 12 with six protons and six neutrons, and carbon 13 with six protons and seven neutrons.
“This is the first evidence from the Americas of dogs being moved around the landscape.”
Carbon in animals’ bodies comes from the plant tissues they consume directly or indirectly. Most plants use the most common type of photosynthesis to turn carbon dioxide into carbohydrates. This process leaves mostly the lighter carbon isotope, carbon 12, behind, bound up in carbohydrate molecules. Corn, sugarcane, and other grasses use another type of photosynthesis that concentrates heavier, carbon 13 molecules. Nitrogen isotopes in proteins demonstrate a similar pattern.
Sharpe, who began the research as a doctoral student at the University of Florida, and study coauthors analyzed the isotopes in animal remains from Ceibal, Guatemala, a Maya site with one of the longest histories of continuous occupation, and one of the earliest ceremonial sites. Most of the bones and teeth they tested were from the Maya Middle Preclassic period (700–350 BCE).
“The animal remains fall into two categories, those with lower carbon isotopes, indicating they were eating mostly wild plants, and those with higher isotopes, which were probably eating corn.”
All of the dogs, two northern turkeys, Meleagris gallopavo, the turkey species that humans eventually domesticated, and one of two large cats were probably eating corn or other animals that fed on corn, such as a peccary (wild pig).
Because people in the region often killed animals that came into gardens and areas where crops were growing, it is possible that peccaries and turkeys may also have been eating crop plants, but it is likely that people were managing turkeys by the end of the Classic Period.
Deer bones showed butcher marks, but they were hunted from the forest, not domesticated according to isotope analysis of bones that also had lower carbon isotopes.
One large cat and a smaller cat, probably a margay (Leopardus wiedii), had lower carbon isotopes indicating that they ate animals that fed on wild plants.
Dog trade and a big cat
The ratio of two strontium isotopes reflects the local geology in a region. Forty-four of the 46 animals had strontium isotope ratios matching Ceibal and the surrounding southern lowlands region. However, to Sharpe’s surprise, jaw bones from two dogs excavated from deep pits at the heart of the ancient ceremonial complex had strontium isotope ratios matching drier, mountainous regions near present-day Guatemala City.
“This is the first evidence from the Americas of dogs being moved around the landscape,” Sharpe says. “Around 1000 AD there’s evidence that dogs were moved out to islands in the Caribbean, but the Ceibal remains are dated at about 400 BC.”
Part of a big cat’s jaw bone with teeth was found with one of the dogs in the same deposit.
“The interesting thing is that this big cat was local, but possibly not wild,” Sharpe says. “Based on its tooth enamel, it had been eating a diet similar to that of the dogs since it was very young. Perhaps it was captured and raised in captivity, or it lived near villages and ate animals that were feeding on corn. We still have to look at the DNA to figure out if it was a jaguar or a puma.”
Bones hint at lives of Maya middle class
Sharpe is looking forward to understanding more about the context of these finds. “The results in this publication are based on excavations we did in 2012. My colleagues at the Ceibal-Petexbatun Archaeological Project will publish additional analyses, and I’m looking forward to finding out if all of the human remains at the site are from the region.”
“It’s interesting to consider whether humans may have had a greater impact managing and manipulating animal species in ancient Mesoamerica than has been believed,” Sharpe says. “Studies like this one are beginning to show that animals played a key role in ceremonies and demonstrations of power, which perhaps drove animal-rearing and trade.”
Funding for the work came from the National Science Foundation, Sigma Xi Scientific Research Society, the University of Florida’s Latin American Studies Program Tinker Grant, the university’s department of anthropology Charles Fairbanks Award, and Alphawood Foundation.
Source: Beth King for University of Florida