Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez
University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
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Featured researches published by Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2016
Jonathan Santana; Rosa Fregel; Emma Lightfoot; Jacob Morales; Martha Alamón; José Guillén; Marco Moreno; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez
OBJECTIVES The Canary Islands are considered one of the first places where Atlantic slave plantations with labourers of African origin were established, during the 15th century AD. In Gran Canaria (Canary Islands, Spain), a unique cemetery dated to the 15th and 17th centuries was discovered adjacent to an ancient sugar plantation with funerary practices that could be related to enslaved people. In this article, we investigate the origin and possible birthplace of each individual buried in this cemetery, as well as the identity and social status of these people. MATERIALS AND METHODS The sample consists of 14 individuals radiocarbon dated to the 15th and 17th centuries AD. We have employed several methods, including the analysis of ancient human DNA, stable isotopes, and skeletal markers of physical activity. RESULTS 1) the funerary practices indicate a set of rituals not previously recorded in the Canary Islands; 2) genetic data show that some people buried in the cemetery could have North-African and sub-Saharan African lineages; 3) isotopic results suggest that some individuals were born outside Gran Canaria; and 4) markers of physical activity show a pattern of labour involving high levels of effort. DISCUSSION This set of evidence, along with information from historical sources, suggests that Finca Clavijo was a cemetery for a multiethnic marginalized population that had being likely enslaved. Results also indicate that this population kept practicing non-Christian rituals well into the 17th century. We propose that this was possible because the location of the Canaries, far from mainland Spain and the control of the Spanish Crown, allowed the emergence of a new society with multicultural origins that was more tolerant to foreign rituals and syncretism.
<p>Quartär [ISSN 0375-7471], vol. 62, p. 155-184</p> | 2015
J. Lindstadter; G. Wagner; M. Broich; Juan Francisco Gibaja; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez
Ifri Oudadane represents one of the few recently excavated sites in NW-Africa which permits a study of the Neolithic transition. The site is dated by 23 radiocarbon ages suggesting an occupation between 11.0 and 5.7 ka calBP. The well-documented Neolithic transition occurred at about 7.6 ka calBP. This transition is marked by the appearance of pottery, cereals and legumes. Furthermore, geochemistry and micromorphology indicate several changes in the sedimentation milieu. One of the most interesting aspects of Neolithisation is the question of the continuity or discontinuity of this process. Does the transition to food production appear as part of a migration process or did local forager groups promote this develop-ment? Lithic material offers, as it appears through all periods, the best opportunity to study these developments. This paper presents an unchanging lithic industry across the Neolithisation regarding blank production, raw material supply, as well as tool composition. These results indicate an active role of local hunter-gatherers, and has therefore significant impact on the understanding of the Neolithisation process within the Western Mediterranean as a whole. Zusammenfassung Die im östlichen Rif in Marokko gelegene Fundstelle Ifri Oudadane ist eine der wenigen in letzter Zeit ausgegrabenen Fundstellen in Nordwest-Afrika, die es erlauben den Übergang vom Epipaläolithikum zum Neolithikum zu untersuchen. Die 23 14C-Daten belegen eine Nutzung des Abris im Zeitraum von 11,0 bis 5,7 ka calBP. Der sehr gut dokumentierte Übergang zum Neolithikum konnte in den Zeitraum um 7,6 ka calBP datiert werden und ist gekennzeichnet durch das Aufkommen von Keramik, Getreide und Hülsenfrüchten. Ferner belegen geochemische und mikromorphologische Untersuchungen einige Änderungen in der Sedimentation. Eine der interessantesten Aspekte der Neolithisierung ist die Frage nach Kontinuität oder Diskontinuität und damit ob der Übergang zur produzierenden Wirtschaftsweise in der Hauptsache durch Migration oder Akkulturation voran getrieben wurde. Die lithischen Artefakte bieten hierbei die einzigartige Möglichkeit kontinuierliche Entwicklungen am Übergang vom Epipaläolithikum zum Neolithikum zu entdecken, da sie in beiden Perioden auftreten. Die vorliegende Untersuchung belegt, dass sich die Steingeräteherstellung in Hinblick auf Grundformproduktion, Rohmaterialversorgung und den genutzten Werkzeugen während der Neolithisierung nicht veränderte. Dies deutet auf eine aktive Rolle der lokalen Jäger-Sammler-Gesellschaften in diesem Prozess hin und ist daher von außerordentlicher Bedeutung für das Verständnis der Neolithisierung im westlichen Mittelmeer.
<p>Lucentum [ISSN 1989-9904] n. XXXVI, p. 9-31</p> | 2017
Miguel del Pino Curbelo; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez
This paper comprehends a new proposal for the classification of the aboriginal ceramics from the island Gran Canaria. This classification system integrates technological, morphological and functional traits of archaeological vessels that have been properly contextualized. Moreover, the results are discussed taking into account functional and chronological differences among the assemblages, as well as previously published data. As a consequence, a number of functional groups, related to different chaines operatoires , were defined. Moreover, the groups also exhibited spatial and chronological variability that seems to reflect the creation of identity borders within the island’s population, these limits being more evident in advanced moments of the indigenous occupation.
Environmental Archaeology | 2009
Jacob Morales; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez; Verónica Alberto; Carmen Machado; Constantino Criado
Archive | 2010
Juan Francisco Gibaja; Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez; Jesús Emilio González Urquijo; Ignacio Clemente-Conte; Virginia García Díaz; Unai Perales
Le site néolithique de Tell Mureybet (Syrie du Nord): en hommage à Jacques Cauvin. Vol. 1, p. 365-405 | 2008
Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; Jesús Emilio González Urquijo; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez
<p>Análisis funcional: su aplicación al estudio de sociedades prehistóricas = Functional analysis: its application to the study of prehistoric societies / coord. por Ignacio Clemente Conte, Robert Risch, Juan Francisco Gibaja Bao, p. 121-132</p> | 2002
Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez; Bertila Galván; Cristo M. Hernández Gómez
Archive | 2013
Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez; Maya Haïdar-Boustani; Jesús Emilio González Urquijo; Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; Michel Al-Maqdissi; Xavier Terradas-Batlle; Lydia Zapata Peña
<p>Systèmes techniques et communautes du Néolithique Précéramique au Proche-Orient. Technical Systems and Near Eastern PPN Communities, sous la direction de Laurence Astruc, Didier Binder et François Briois / Éditions APDCA, Antibes, p. 153-165</p> | 2007
Juan José Ibáñez-Estévez; Jesús Emilio González Urquijo; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez
Rubricatum: revista del Museu de Gavà | 1996
Pedro González Quintero; Amelia del Carmen Rodríguez Rodríguez; Dimas Martín Socas; María Dolores Cámalich Massieu
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María del Cristo González Marrero
University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
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