Karla L. Davis-Salazar
University of South Florida
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Featured researches published by Karla L. Davis-Salazar.
Latin American Antiquity | 2003
Karla L. Davis-Salazar
Recent research on prehispanic water management throughout the Americas has made significant contributions to our understanding of the diversity of adaptive systems employed in regions where water is seasonally scarce, such as the Maya Lowlands. Since much of this workfocuses on large-scale technologies, the political and economic consequences of these systems for smaller social units remain poorly understood. Social dynamics associated with less-intensive forms of water use and control are investigated at Late Classic (A.D. 600–900) Copan, in a water-rich setting of western Honduras. Ethnographic, iconographic, and archaeological datasets suggest that lagoons located in Copan’s urban residential sectors may have been conceptualized, utilized, and maintained as communal property with ancestral ties by the inhabitants of surrounding domestic groups. By shifting the scale of analysis from the polity to the community level, these lagoons can be viewed as forms of communal property that created an economic and ideological basis for local social integration but offered limited opportunity for the centralization of power through monopolistic control. Yet, toward the end of the Late Classic, the appropriation of water-related dynastic symbolism and possibly ritual seems to have provided nonroyal elites with a means for creating local social identities, which undercut and eroded royal authority.
Archive | 2008
E. Christian Wells; Karla L. Davis-Salazar
This chapter examines the historical relationship between Honduran Lenca worldview and how ecological resources are managed through ritual practice. The way in which the Lenca conceive of the biophysical environment is an active process of meaning-making that takes place through their interaction with the environment. The Lenca codify this relationship in the compostura, a complex set of ceremonial performances linked to economic practices that mediate human needs and desires with those of the ancestors who animate the landscapes surrounding households and communities. Through an examination of contemporary, historical, and archeological cases in western Honduras, this chapter explores how ritual economy shapes, and is shaped by, environmental worldview.
Ancient Mesoamerica | 2006
Karla L. Davis-Salazar
Recent research on pre-Hispanic Maya water management has revealed a diverse array of water-control techniques that were employed in the Maya Lowlands. Since much of this research has focused on water management for consumption and agriculture, other forms of water management—namely, for drainage and flood control—remain poorly understood. This report describes the various water-control techniques dedicated to drainage and flood control at Late Classic Copan, Honduras (a.d. 600–900), and explores the social implications of this form of water control. Technological variation in water control throughout urban Copan and between Copan and Palenque, the other major Maya center where drainage and flood control have been investigated, suggests that water management at Copan may have been organized differentially across the urban center.
Journal of Field Archaeology | 2007
Karla L. Davis-Salazar; E. Christian Wells; José E. Moreno-Cortés
Abstract Exploring the implications of a recent discovery in NW Honduras, this paper considers the ethical dilemma that arises when an archaeologists responsibility to disseminate information conflicts with her/his commitment to protect cultural resources. We suggest that applied archaeology that benefits local communities among which investigations are conducted is a first step toward developing long-term solutions to conservation and stewardship challenges.
Archive | 2007
E. Christian Wells; Karla L. Davis-Salazar
Geoarchaeology-an International Journal | 2005
Karla L. Davis-Salazar
J3ea | 2014
E. Christian Wells; Karla L. Davis-Salazar; José E. Moreno-Cortés
The SAA archaeological record | 2004
Nancy Marie White; Brent R. Weisman; Robert H. Tykot; E. Christian Wells; Karla L. Davis-Salazar; John W. Arthur; Kathryn Weedman Arthur
Latin American Antiquity | 2014
E. Christian Wells; Karla L. Davis-Salazar; José E. Moreno-Cortés; Glenn S. L. Stuart; Anna C. Novotny
Ciencias Espaciales | 2017
Barbara Fash; Karla L. Davis-Salazar