Keywords

ground stone, mesoamerica, manos, metates, archaeology

Abstract

Some of the most ubiquitous artifacts found at archaeological sites across Mesoamerica are manos and metates. Yet these important household implements continue to be underrepresented in the archaeological literature. This paper highlights recent ethnographic research on groundstone produced and used by four Mayan communities in Guatemala. We demonstrate how the size of grinding surfaces can be indicative of function, and how modern taboos can be examined to explore notions of gender. Groundstone from the site of La Quemada, Mexico is then analyzed in light of such inferences to evaluate the consistency of archaeological patterning with ethnographic observations.

Original Publication Citation

Searcy, Michael T., and Jaime Holthusen 2006 Moving from a Grinding Halt: Expanding the Interpretation of Ground Stone through Ethnoarchaeology. Paper presented at Society for American Archaeology 71st Annual Meeting, San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Document Type

Conference Paper

Publication Date

2006

Publisher

Society for American Archaeology

Language

English

College

Family, Home, and Social Sciences

Department

Anthropology

University Standing at Time of Publication

Graduate Student

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