Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y Jíbaro

The Upano valley, in upper Ecuadorian Amazonia, is characterized by numerous precolumbian artificial earthmounds. Built then abandoned by Upano societies between 700 BC and 400 AD, some of them were re-occupied by Huapula groups between 800 and 1200 AD. Open-area excavations of one mound produced a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Bulletin de l'Institut Français d'Études Andines
Main Author: Stéphen Rostain
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Institut Français d'Études Andines 2006-12-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/bifea/3890
_version_ 1849885288388624384
author Stéphen Rostain
author_facet Stéphen Rostain
author_sort Stéphen Rostain
collection DOAJ
container_title Bulletin de l'Institut Français d'Études Andines
description The Upano valley, in upper Ecuadorian Amazonia, is characterized by numerous precolumbian artificial earthmounds. Built then abandoned by Upano societies between 700 BC and 400 AD, some of them were re-occupied by Huapula groups between 800 and 1200 AD. Open-area excavations of one mound produced a well preserved domestic level, permitting a spatial analysis of activities. Ethnoarchaeological study of the Huapula house has shown great similarities with settlements of modern Jivaros groups of the area.
format Article
id doaj-art-ceebffd3585b4b5fae59e08e5fe12e5e
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 0303-7495
2076-5827
language Spanish
publishDate 2006-12-01
publisher Institut Français d'Études Andines
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-ceebffd3585b4b5fae59e08e5fe12e5e2025-08-20T01:07:13ZspaInstitut Français d'Études AndinesBulletin de l'Institut Français d'Études Andines0303-74952076-58272006-12-013533734610.4000/bifea.3890Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y JíbaroStéphen RostainThe Upano valley, in upper Ecuadorian Amazonia, is characterized by numerous precolumbian artificial earthmounds. Built then abandoned by Upano societies between 700 BC and 400 AD, some of them were re-occupied by Huapula groups between 800 and 1200 AD. Open-area excavations of one mound produced a well preserved domestic level, permitting a spatial analysis of activities. Ethnoarchaeological study of the Huapula house has shown great similarities with settlements of modern Jivaros groups of the area.https://journals.openedition.org/bifea/3890AmazoniaethnoarchaeologyUpanoHuapulaJivarossettlement
spellingShingle Stéphen Rostain
Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y Jíbaro
Amazonia
ethnoarchaeology
Upano
Huapula
Jivaros
settlement
title Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y Jíbaro
title_full Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y Jíbaro
title_fullStr Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y Jíbaro
title_full_unstemmed Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y Jíbaro
title_short Etnoarqueología de las casas Huapula y Jíbaro
title_sort etnoarqueologia de las casas huapula y jibaro
topic Amazonia
ethnoarchaeology
Upano
Huapula
Jivaros
settlement
url https://journals.openedition.org/bifea/3890
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenrostain etnoarqueologiadelascasashuapulayjibaro