8 resultados para América Central-Antigüedades
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
The end of the Cold War did not bring about an end to violence in Central America. Today, so-called non-political violence continues to worsen. Academics and public policymakers are frequently influenced by the assumption that there is a causal relationship between the political violence of the 1980s and the non-political violence of today. By looking at the cases of El Salvador and Honduras, this working paper seeks to systematize existing claims about the causal relationship between past and present violence into two approaches. Our research shows that high levels of prolonged political violence, along with an abundance of firearms, can lead to high levels of prolonged non-political violence but not in the ways most often cited in existing literature. We propose a new model to better understand the connection between past and present violence and recommend indicators that can be used to measure variations in violence over time in contexts of protracted non-political violence.
Resumo:
The genetic characterization of Native Mexicans is important to understand multiethnic based features influencing the medical genetics of present Mexican populations, as well as to the reconstruct the peopling of the Americas. We describe the Y-chromosome genetic diversity of 197 Native Mexicans from 11 populations and 1,044 individuals from 44 Native American populations after combining with publicly available data. We found extensive heterogeneity among Native Mexican populations and ample segregation of Q-M242* (46%) and Q-M3 (54%) haplogroups within Mexico. The northernmost sampled populations falling outside Mesoamerica (Pima and Tarahumara) showed a clear differentiation with respect to the other populations, which is in agreement with previous results from mtDNA lineages. However, our results point toward a complex genetic makeup of Native Mexicans whose maternal and paternal lineages reveal different narratives of their population history, with sex-biased continental contributions and different admixture proportions. At a continental scale, we found that Arctic populations and the northernmost groups from North America cluster together, but we did not find a clear differentiation within Mesoamerica and the rest of the continent, which coupled with the fact that the majority of individuals from Central and South American samples are restricted to the Q-M3 branch, supports the notion that most Native Americans from Mesoamerica southwards are descendants from a single wave of migration. This observation is compatible with the idea that present day Mexico might have constituted an area of transition in the diversification of paternal lineages during the colonization of the Americas.
Resumo:
Mesoamerica, defined as the broad linguistic and cultural area from middle southern Mexico to Costa Rica, might have played a pivotal role during the colonization of theAmerican continent. It has been suggested that the Mesoamerican isthmus could have played an important role in severely restricting prehistorically gene flow between North and SouthAmerica. Although the Native American component has been already described in admixedMexican populations, few studies have been carried out in native Mexican populations. In thisstudy we present mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence data for the first hypervariable region (HVR-I) in 477 unrelated individuals belonging to eleven different native populations from Mexico. Almost all the Native Mexican mtDNAs could be classified into the four pan-Amerindian haplogroups (A2, B2, C1 and D1); only three of them could be allocated to the rare Native American lineage D4h3. Their haplogroup phylogenies are clearly star-like, as expected from relatively young populations that have experienced diverse episodes of genetic drift (e.g. extensive isolation, genetic drift and founder effects) and posterior population expansions. In agreement with this observation is the fact that Native Mexican populations show a high degree of heterogeneity in their patterns of haplogroup frequencies. HaplogroupX2a was absent in our samples, supporting previous observations where this clade was only detected in the American northernmost areas. The search for identical sequences in the American continent shows that, although Native Mexican populations seem to show a closer relationship to North American populations, they cannot be related to a single geographical region within the continent. Finally, we did not find significant population structure on the maternal lineages when considering the four main and distinct linguistic groups represented in our Mexican samples (Oto-Manguean, Uto-Aztecan, Tarascan, and Mayan), suggesting that genetic divergence predates linguistic diversification in Mexico.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: CODIS-STRs in Native Mexican groups have rarely been analysed for human identification and anthropological purposes. AIM:To analyse the genetic relationships and population structure among three Native Mexican groups from Mesoamerica.SUBJECTS AND METHODS: 531 unrelated Native individuals from Mexico were PCR-typed for 15 and 9 autosomal STRs (Identifiler™ and Profiler™ kits, respectively), including five population samples: Purépechas (Mountain, Valley and Lake), Triquis and Yucatec Mayas. Previously published STR data were included in the analyses. RESULTS:Allele frequencies and statistical parameters of forensic importance were estimated by population. The majority of Native groups were not differentiated pairwise, excepting Triquis and Purépechas, which was attributable to their relative geographic and cultural isolation. Although Mayas, Triquis and Purépechas-Mountain presented the highest number of private alleles, suggesting recurrent gene flow, the elevated differentiation of Triquis indicates a different origin of this gene flow. Interestingly, Huastecos and Mayas were not differentiated, which is in agreement with the archaeological hypothesis that Huastecos represent an ancestral Maya group. Interpopulation variability was greater in Natives than in Mestizos, both significant.CONCLUSION: Although results suggest that European admixture has increased the similarity between Native Mexican groups, the differentiation and inconsistent clustering by language or geography stresses the importance of serial founder effect and/or genetic drift in showing their present genetic relationships.
Resumo:
En este trabajo se analizan los envíos de libros en el navío de Honduras, que viajaba entre Sevilla y los puertos atlánticos de la costa centroamericana. Examinamos una muestra de 52 registros de navíos, que suponen un 20% del total. Esto nos ha permitido localizar lotes de libros declarados en 34 barcos, en los que se han encontrado 130 envíos de libros. Este conjunto ayuda a detectar las claves del circuito de llegada de los libros, muy poco conocido, por medio de comerciantes, libreros y particulares. El estudio de los intermediarios también permitió localizar algunas de las redes que intervienen en ese tráfico de libros. Por último, el estudio de los títulos embarcados ha llevado a encontrar una muestra significativa de los textos impresos en Europa que llegaron en los siglos XVI y XVII al área de Guatemala y Honduras.
Resumo:
Teotihuacan se encuentra en el sector noroeste de la Cuenca de México (19' 34'N, 99VO'W) entre los 2.240 y 3.100 mt s.n.m. Es una de las culturas de la Antigüedad más asombrosas; no tan sólo por el tamaño de sus pirámides y estructura habitacionales sino porque supone el desarrollo de un fenómeno urbano extremadamente complejo que marcará el desarrollo del periodo Clásico en el Altiplano mexicano a lo largo de setecientos años de historia humana. La arqueología teotihuacana es engañosamente poco complicada. Teotihuacan se encuentra en un área accesible y por varias razones en las que se mezclan aspectos culturales, económicos (es una de las zonas arqueológicas más visitadas del mundo) y también políticos ha gozado de proyectos de investigación más o menos continuados desde hace un siglo. Para el investigador foráneo, el primer impacto se deriva del tamaño y volumen de las estructuras y de la cantidad de material arqueológico que puede derivarse de cualquier excavación en esta zona. A nivel de trabajo de campo, y en comparación con otras culturas de la Antigüedad los teotihuacanos tenían una arquitectura muy bien definida con una traza urbana bien reticulada
Resumo:
En la literatura arqueológica, el uso del término Estdo para las sociedades antiguas se aplica profusamente desde la segunda mitad del siglo XIX. Alrededor de ello la academia de investigaciones ha desarrollado diversos modelos para comprender el modo de organización de dichas sociedades atentiendo a cuestiones políticas, económicas, medioambientales e ideológicas. La bibliogradia es ingente e inabarcable para un artículo, y tal vez incluso para un libro; por lo que no deben de tomarse estas líneas como una descripción exhaustiva de qué es el Estado, ya que habrá colegas que incidirán en la definición del Estado, con mucho más detalle, así que aprovecho para marcar lo que considero procedente en este espacio tratar, tal vez, con cierta ligereza académica. A mi entender, considero que en forma muy amplia podemos denominar Estado a aquellas sociedades con un nivel de organización sociopolítica de su definición más que económica o ambiental.
Resumo:
Estos tres volúmenes de Actas de las sucesivas Jornadas Internacionales sobre Indigenismo Americano ponen al alcance dels lector un excepcional conjunto de trabajos de especialistas de ambas orillas del Atlántico.