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Dive into the research topics where Roberto Rodríguez Suárez is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberto Rodríguez Suárez.


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 1999

Analyses of DNA from ancient bones of a pre-Columbian Cuban woman and a child

Ricardo Lleonart; Eileen Riego; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez; Rafael Travieso Ruiz; José de la Fuente

Molecular anthropology has brought new possibilities into the study of ancient human populations. Amplification of chromosomal short tandem repeat (STR) loci and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has been successfully employed in analyses of ancient bone material. Although several studies have reported on continental Amerindian populations, none have addressed the ancient populations inhabiting the Caribbean islands. We used STR and mtDNA analyses to study the skeletal remains of a Cuban Ciboney female adult holding an infant. Results showed that for the STR analyzed the skeletal remains shared common alleles, suggesting a relationship. Mitochondrial DNA analysis showed sequence identity, thus corroborating a possible mother-child relationship. The mtDNA sequence grouped these remains into haplogroup A, commonly found in Amerindian populations. Based on these results, we speculated on a South American origin of pre-Columbian Antilles populations and possible infanticide practices in these populations. This constitutes the first report on DNA analysis of ancient pre-Columbian Cuban populations.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Isotopic reconstruction of the weaning process in the archaeological population of Canímar Abajo, Cuba: A Bayesian probability mixing model approach

Yadira Chinique de Armas; Mirjana Roksandic; Dejana Nikitović; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez; Nadine Kanik; Dailys García Jordá; William M. Buhay; Andrea S. Wiley

The general lack of well-preserved juvenile skeletal remains from Caribbean archaeological sites has, in the past, prevented evaluations of juvenile dietary changes. Canímar Abajo (Cuba), with a large number of well-preserved juvenile and adult skeletal remains, provided a unique opportunity to fully assess juvenile paleodiets from an ancient Caribbean population. Ages for the start and the end of weaning and possible food sources used for weaning were inferred by combining the results of two Bayesian probability models that help to reduce some of the uncertainties inherent to bone collagen isotope based paleodiet reconstructions. Bone collagen (31 juveniles, 18 adult females) was used for carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses. The isotope results were assessed using two Bayesian probability models: Weaning Ages Reconstruction with Nitrogen isotopes and Stable Isotope Analyses in R. Breast milk seems to have been the most important protein source until two years of age with some supplementary food such as tropical fruits and root cultigens likely introduced earlier. After two, juvenile diets were likely continuously supplemented by starch rich foods such as root cultigens and legumes. By the age of three, the model results suggest that the weaning process was completed. Additional indications suggest that animal marine/riverine protein and maize, while part of the Canímar Abajo female diets, were likely not used to supplement juvenile diets. The combined use of both models here provided a more complete assessment of the weaning process for an ancient Caribbean population, indicating not only the start and end ages of weaning but also the relative importance of different food sources for different age juveniles.


Radiocarbon | 2015

Radiocarbon and Stratigraphic Chronology of Canímar Abajo, Matanzas, Cuba

Mirjana Roksandic; William M. Buhay; Yadira Chinique de Armas; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez; Matthew Peros; Ivan Roksandic; Stephanie Mowat; Luis M Viera; Carlos Arredondo; Antonio Julián Martínez Fuentes; David G. Smith

Twelve accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates from the shell-matrix site of Canimar Abajo (Matanzas, Cuba) are reported. Eleven were obtained directly from human bone collagen in burials and one was obtained from charcoal recovered from a burial context. The site stratigraphy presents two episodes of burial activity separated by a shell midden layer. The AMS dates fall into two compact clusters that correlate remarkably well with the stratigraphy. The older burial dates to between 1380–800 cal BC (2σ) and the younger one to between cal AD 360–950 (2σ). The AMS dates are compared to eight conventional 14 C dates previously obtained on shell and charcoal. One of the conventional dates on charcoal (5480–5380 cal BC; 2σ) has been reported as the oldest 14 C date in the Caribbean region; its context and reliability are clarified. The suite of AMS dates provides one of the most reliable chronometric dating of a cultural context during this timeframe in Cuba. The correlation of 14 C and stratigraphy establishes a solid chronology for investigating the important economic and ritual features of Canimar Abajo. DOI: 10.2458/azu_rc.57.18313


PLOS ONE | 2016

Not of African Descent: Dental Modification among Indigenous Caribbean People from Canimar Abajo, Cuba.

Mirjana Roksandic; Kaitlynn R Alarie; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez; Erwin Huebner; Ivan Roksandic

Dental modifications in the Caribbean are considered to be an African practice introduced to the Caribbean archipelago by the influx of enslaved Africans during colonial times. Skeletal remains which exhibited dental modifications are by default considered to be Africans, African descendants, or post-contact indigenous people influenced by an African practice. Individual E-105 from the site of Canímar Abajo (Cuba), with a direct 14C AMS date of 990–800 cal BC, provides the first unequivocal evidence of dental modifications in the Antilles prior to contact with Europeans in AD 1492. Central incisors showing evidence of significant crown reduction (loss of crown volume regardless of its etiology) were examined macroscopically and with a scanning electron microscope (SEM) to determine if the observed alterations were due to deliberate modification or other (unintentional) factors considered: postmortem breakage, violent accidental breakage, non-dietary use of teeth, and wear caused by habitual or repeated actions. The pattern of crown reduction is consistent with deliberate dental modification of the type commonly encountered among African and African descendent communities in post-contact Caribbean archaeological assemblages. Six additional individuals show similar pattern of crown reduction of maxillary incisors with no analogous wear in corresponding mandibular dentition.


Archive | 2009

The Archaeology of a Search: An Archaeological Search; The History of the Finding of “Che” Guevara’s Remains

Roberto Rodríguez Suárez

1997 became a milestone in the history of the cultural meanings associated with the figure of Ernesto “Che” Guevara and his guerrilla partners. The well-known picture where his tough image was brilliantly captured by the Cuban photographer Alberto Kords turned him into a symbol of fight for many generations, not only in Latin America but also throughout the world. Without a doubt, the image of this Cuban-Argentinean guerrilla-man and his ideas became tangible when people heard his remains were finally found.


Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2010

The Study of Archaeological Floors: Methodological Proposal for the Analysis of Anthropogenic Residues by Spot Tests, ICP-OES, and GC-MS

William D. Middleton; Luis Barba; Alessandra Pecci; James H. Burton; Agustín Ortiz; Laura Salvini; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez


Boletín Antropológico | 2008

Estudio paleodietario en restos óseos aborígenes del sitio arqueológico Canímar Abajo, Matanzas, Cuba

Yadira Chinique de Armas; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez; Carlos Arredondo Antúne; Odalys Collazo; Aurelio Boza; Sheila Alleyne; Manuel Álvarez; María Liva; Juan Jiménez


Cuba Arqueológica. Revista digital de Arqueología de Cuba y el Caribe | 2012

CAMBIOS EN LAS ACTIVIDADES SUBSISTENCIALES DE LOS ABORÍGENES DEL SITIO ARQUEOLÓGICO CANÍMAR ABAJO, MATANZAS, CUBA

Yadira Chinique de Armas; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez


The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018

New Insights into the Consumption of Cultigens for "Archaic" Age Populations in Cuba: The Archaeological Site of Playa el Mango, Rio Cauto, Granma

Yadira Chinique de Armas; Ulises Miguel Gonzalez Herrera; Megan Filyk; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez; Mirjana Roksandic


The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017

A Bayesian model sensitivity study of non-static diet-collagen isotope fractionations factors used to assess breastfeeding and weaning practices among fisher-gatherers populations, western Cuba

Bill Buhay; Yadira Chinique de Armas; Mirjana Roksandic; Roberto Rodríguez Suárez

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