2020-04-26

Norte Chico and the Andes

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huaricanga

Norte Chico


5000 years ago, the Norte Chico region was the cradle of Andean civilization. Norte Chico (“Little North”) is a region on Peru’s north central Pacific coast approximately 100 miles north of the modern city of Lima. It contains four river valleys: Fortaleza, Pativilca, Supe, and Huaura. Archaeological surveys have uncovered 30 Late Archaic sites, ranging from 10 to 200 hectares in area. These sites are characterized by large, pyramid-like structures, sunken ceremonial plazas, and other assorted temples and housing.

Role of agriculture


For the past 40 years, the reasons as to why all of these South American ancient civilizations emerged in Peru in the Late Archaic period have been a topic of debate. Many believed that the nearby marine resources were the catalyst to the rapid cultural development in the Andean region of Peru. The minimal macroscopic evidence of corn led researchers to believe that it was simply used for ceremonial purposes. However, between 2002 and 2008, researchers conducted exploratory excavations in the valleys of Pativilca and Fortaleza.[3] The majority of the focus was on two sites in particular, Caballete and Huaricanga. The researchers looked at microscopic evidence found in soil samples, stone tools, and coprolites (fossilized fecal matter). In the prehistoric samples, they found an abundance of Zea mays pollen. This is congruent with evidence found Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, and China, which are other ancient cultures that emerged due to agriculture. Also, of the stone tools that were tested, the large majority showed evidence of corn starch grains or corn phytoliths, which are plant silica bodies. Finally, in the coprolites that they tested, most contained corn starch grains or corn phytoliths, in addition to evidence of sweet potatoes and anchovies. All of this evidence firmly points to agriculture as the driving force behind the development of civilization in Huaricanga, as well as the entire Andean region. Recent research indicates the presence of 14 other domesticated plant species, both fruits and vegetables. It is believed that in addition to being used as sustenance, these botanical species were also used for religious rituals, healing rituals, and construction materials.[citation needed]

Huaricanga

Huaricanga is the earliest city of the Norte Chico civilization. It existed around 3500 BC and was the oldest city in the Americas and one of the earliest cities in the world."[1] This Late Archaic site is located in the Fortaleza Valley on Peru’s north central coast. It is 14 mi (23 km) inland from the Pacific Ocean. The site covers a total area of 100 hectares, and is the largest Late Archaic construction in the Norte Chico region. Currently, the Pativilca-Huaraz highway divides the site. The current site consists of two mounds, the larger of which measures roughly 220 m (720 ft) in length. Near this larger mound were two standing stones, known as huancas, which are believed to hold some sacred ceremonial purpose. Huaricanga also served as a religious center, and residents would persuade fishermen and inhabitants of the nearby highlands to participate in seasonal rituals.
Additionally, there is a third, U shaped mound located above the river floodplain at Huaricanga. It is known as El Castillo de Huaricanga, and judging from the ceramics found at the site, it was from the Initial Period (1800–900 BC).[2] During this time and during the Early Horizon Period (900–200 BC), El Castillo de Huaricanga served as a stop for travelers on their way to the major religious site of Chavin de Huantar.
The site of Huaricanga has been excavated in 2003 and 2007 by PANC (Proyecto Arqueológico Norte Chico). The 2007 excavation uncovered evidence of a structure that consisted of a two level floor, a surrounding bench, a central fire pit, and niched walls. This indicates that the temple was constructed in the Mito architectural tradition, which is also seen in the Peruvian highlands. However, using radiocarbon dating, the structure has been confirmed to be constructed around 2560 BC. This means that this temple predates even the earliest known examples of the Mito tradition. A range of samples was tested, including mixed plant fibers, bag fibers, and charcoal.
The land in and around Huaricanga consists mainly of rock and dirt, with very few trees. The climate is generally dry. The ancient people of Huaricanga were completely dependent on irrigation for the growth of their crops. Some experts theorize that an increased frequency of the weather phenomenon El Niño worsened fishing conditions, driving people inland towards sites such as Huaricanga.[citation needed]

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huaricanga

Norte Chico History and Geography



Remains of platform mound structures at Caral
The dating of the Norte Chico sites has changed the estimated beginning date of complex societies in the Peruvian region by more than one thousand years. The Chavín culture, circa 900 BC, had long been considered the first civilization of the area. It is still regularly cited as such in general works.[10][11]
The discovery of Norte Chico has also shifted the focus of research away from the highland areas of the Andes and lowlands adjacent to the mountains (where the Chavín, and later Inca, had their major centers) to the Peruvian littoral, or coastal regions. Norte Chico is located in a north-central area of the coast, approximately 150 to 200 kmnorth of Lima, roughly bounded by the Lurín Valley on the south and the Casma Valley on the north. It comprises four coastal valleys: the HuauraSupePativilca, and Fortaleza; known sites are concentrated in the latter three, which share a common coastal plain. The three principal valleys cover only 1,800 km², and research has emphasized the density of the population centers.[12]
The Peruvian littoral appears an "improbable, even aberrant" candidate for the "pristine" development of civilization, compared to other world centers.[1] It is extremely arid, bounded by two rain shadows (caused by the Andes to the east, and the Pacific trade winds to the west). The region is punctuated by more than 50 rivers that carry Andean snowmelt. The development of widespread irrigation from these water sources is seen as decisive in the emergence of Norte Chico;[3][13] since all of the monumental architecture at various sites has been found close to irrigation channels.
The radiocarbon work of Jonathan Haas et al., found that 10 of 95 samples taken in the Pativilca and Fortaleza areas dated from before 3500 BC; the oldest, dating from 9210 BC, provides "limited indication" of human settlement during the Pre-Columbian Early Archaic era. Two dates of 3700 BC are associated with communal architecture, but are likely to be anomalous. It is from 3200 BC onward that large-scale human settlement and communal construction are clearly apparent.[2] Mann, in a survey of the literature in 2005, suggests "sometime before 3200 BC, and possibly before 3500 BC" as the beginning date of the Norte Chico formative period. He notes that the earliest date securely associated with a city is 3500 BC, at Huaricanga, in the Fortaleza area of the north, based on Haas's dates.[1]
Haas's early-third-millennium dates suggest that the development of coastal and inland sites occurred in parallel. But, from 2500 to 2000 BC, during the period of greatest expansion, the population and development decisively shifted toward the inland sites. All development apparently occurred at large interior sites such as Caral, though they remained dependent on fish and shellfish from the coast.[2] The peak in dates is in keeping with Shady's dates at Caral, which show habitation from 2627 BC to 2020 BC.[8] That coastal and inland sites developed in tandem remains disputed, however (see next section).
Circa 1800 BC, the Norte Chico civilization began to decline, with more powerful centers appearing to the south and north along the coast, and to the east inside the belt of the Andes. Norte Chico's success at irrigation-based agriculture may have contributed to its being eclipsed. Anthropologist Professor Winifred Creamer of Northern Illinois Universitynotes that "when this civilization is in decline, we begin to find extensive canals farther north. People were moving to more fertile ground and taking their knowledge of irrigation with them".[3] It would be a thousand years before the rise of the next great Peruvian culture, the Chavín.
Caral panorama

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norte_Chico_civilization

Norte Chico Pyramids

Reconstruction of one of the pyramids of Aspero
Base of Norte Chico pyramids


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norte_Chico_civilization

Norte Chico Civilization

The Norte Chico civilization (also Caral or Caral-Supe civilization)[NB 1] was a complex pre-Columbian-era society that included as many as thirty major population centers in what is now the Norte Chico region of north-central coastal Peru. The civilization flourished between the fourth and second millennia BC, with the formation of the first city generally dated to around 3500 BC, at Huaricanga, in the Fortaleza area.[1] It is from 3100 BC onward that large-scale human settlement and communal construction become clearly apparent,[2]which lasted until a period of decline around 1800 BC.[3]Since the early 21st century, it has been established as the oldest-known civilization in the Americas.
This civilization flourished along three rivers, the Fortaleza, the Pativilca, and the Supe. These river valleys each have large clusters of sites. Further south, there are several associated sites along the Huaura River.[4] The alternative name, Caral-Supe, is derived from the city of Caral[5] in the Supe Valley, a large and well-studied Norte Chico site. Complex society in Norte Chico arose a millennium after Sumer in Mesopotamia, was contemporaneous with the Egyptian pyramids, and predated the Mesoamerican Olmec by nearly two millennia.
In archaeological nomenclature, Norte Chico is a pre-ceramic culture of the pre-Columbian Late Archaic; it completely lacked ceramics and apparently had almost no visual art. The most impressive achievement of the civilization was its monumental architecture, including large earthwork platform mounds and sunken circular plazas. Archaeological evidence suggests use of textile technology and, possibly, the worship of common god symbols, both of which recur in pre-Columbian Andean cultures. Sophisticated government is assumed to have been required to manage the ancient Norte Chico. Questions remain over its organization, particularly the influence of food resources on politics.
Archaeologists have been aware of ancient sites in the area since at least the 1940s; early work occurred at Aspero on the coast, a site identified as early as 1905,[6] and later at Caral further inland. In the late 1990s, Peruvian archaeologists, led by Ruth Shady, provided the first extensive documentation of the civilization with work at Caral.[7] A 2001 paper in Science, providing a survey of the Caral research,[8] and a 2004 article in Nature, describing fieldwork and radiocarbon dating across a wider area,[2] revealed Norte Chico's full significance and led to widespread interest.[9]

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norte_Chico_civilization

Warlpiri Language


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warlpiri_language

The Warlpiri (/ˈwɑːrlbri/ or /ˈwɔːlpəri/)[4] (Warlpiri: /waɭpiɻi/ > ['waɭbɪ̆ˌɻi])[5][6] language is spoken by about 3,000 of the Warlpiri people in Australia's Northern Territory. It is one of the Ngarrkic languages of the large Pama–Nyungan family, and is one of the largest Aboriginal languages in Australia in terms of number of speakers.
Warlpiri
RegionNorthern Territory, Australia
EthnicityWarlpiriNgalia
Native speakers
2,304 (2016 census)[1]
Dialects
  • Warlpiri
  • Ngaliya
  • Walmala
  • Ngardilpa
  • Eastern Warlpiri
Warlpiri Sign Language
Language codes
ISO 639-3wbp
Glottologwarl1254[2]
AIATSIS[3]C15
Warlpiri map.png
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols.Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbolsinstead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Phonology


In the following tables of the Warlpiri sound system, symbols in boldface give the practical alphabet used by the Warlpiri community.  Phonemic values in IPA are shown in /slashes/ and phonetic values in [square brackets].

Vowels

FrontCentralBack
Closei /i/ii /iː/u /u/uu /uː/
Opena /a/aa /aː/
Warlpiri has a standard three-vowel system similar to that of Classical Arabic, with a length distinction creating a total of six possible vowels.

Consonants

PeripheralLaminalApical
BilabialVelarPalatalAlveolarRetroflex
Plosivep /p/~[b]k /k/~[g]j /c/~[ɟ]t /t/~[d]rt /ʈ/~[ɖ]
Nasalm /m/ng /ŋ/ny /ɲ/n /n/rn /ɳ/
Trillrr /r/
Flaprd /ɽ/ [ɻ͡ɾ]
Laterally /ʎ/l /l/rl /ɭ/
Approximantw /w/y /j/r /ɻ/
As shown in the chart, Warlpiri distinguishes five positions of articulation, and has oral and nasal stops at each position. The oral stops have no phonemic voice distinction, but display voiced and unvoiced allophones; stops are usually unvoiced at the beginning of a word, and voiced elsewhere. In both positions they are usually unaspirated.
Warlpiri, like most Australian languages, has no fricative consonants.
The consonant phoneme listed in the table as a retroflex flap /ɽ/ is phonetically an unusual consonant [ɻ͡ɾ], possibly unique to Warlpiri. The tongue-tip begins in retroflex position, but then moves forward rapidly, flapping against the alveolar ridge.

Syllables and stress

Warlpiri syllables are quite constrained in structure. All syllables begin with a single consonant; there are no syllable-initial consonant clusters, and no syllable begins with a vowel. After the consonant comes a single long or short vowel, which is sometimes followed by a single closing consonant. Open syllables are much more common than closed ones. No syllable ends with a stop or with the retroflex flap /ɽ/.
The most common kind of consonant cluster occurs when a syllable ends with a nasal consonant and the next syllable begins with the corresponding stop, but other clusters like /rk/ and /lp/ also occur.
Stress is not generally distinctive, but assigned by rule. Polysyllabic words receive primary stress on the first syllable, with secondary stresses tending to occur on alternate syllables thereafter; this rhythm may be broken by the structure of the word, so that there are sometimes three-syllable stress groups.

Vowel harmony

If two adjacent syllables in a Warlpiri morpheme have high vowels, then those high vowels are almost always alike; that is, both u or both i. The number of Warlpiri roots with adjacent syllables having u and i is very small. Both progressive and regressive vowel harmony occur. In progressive vowel harmony, the second vowel changes to match the first; in regressive harmony, the first changes to match the second.
This tendency to prefer adjacent high vowels to be identical also spreads across morpheme boundaries within a word. Adding a suffix to a word can place a u and an i in contact. When this happens, one of the vowels tends to assimilate: that is, it changes to match the other vowel. This kind of assimilation is called vowel harmony. Vowel harmony is not rare in the world's languages: it is found, for example, in FinnishHungarianMongolian, and Turkish
Regressive harmony only occurs when attaching a tense suffix to a verb (see below). For example, when the verb panti- (class 2) is placed in the past tense with the suffix -rnu, the result is panturnu, not *pantirnu. Progressive harmony occurs with most other kinds of suffixes. For example, when the ergative case suffix -ngku is attached to the noun karli"boomerang", the result is karlingki, not *karlingku.
On occasion, long chains of high vowels can assimilate, each forcing the next. For example, when the class 2 verb kiji- is attached to the past tense suffix -rnu, the resulting word is kujurnu.

Words

No Warlpiri word begins with an alveolar consonant; the first consonant of a word must be bilabial, palatal, retroflex, or velar. Exceptions to this include borrowings such as tala'dollar', from English dollar.
All Warlpiri words end in vowels. A word whose final meaningful component ends in a consonant is usually "corrected" by appending a meaningless suffix, usually -pa.

Alphabet


Since the 1950s, Warlpiri has been written in Latin script using an alphabet originally devised by Lothar Jagst and subsequently modified slightly. The Warlpiri alphabet uses only ordinary letters, with no accent marks, and has the following deviations from IPA:
  1. Long vowels are written by doubling the vowel letter: iiaauu.
  2. Retroflex consonants are written with digraphs formed by prefixing r to the usual alveolar symbol: rtrnrl.
  3. The palatal stop is written j.
  4. Other palatals are written with digraphs formed by suffixing y to the usual alveolar symbol: nyly. The palatal approximant is written y.
  5. The velar nasal is written ng.
  6. The alveolar trill is written rr.
  7. The retroflex flap is written rd.
  8. The retroflex approximant is written r.
To these basic rules are added two adjustments to make the alphabet easier to use.
  1. The indicators y (for palatal) and r (for retroflex) are often dropped if redundant in consonant clusters that share articulation position. Examples: nyj is written njrnrt is written rnt.
  2. At the beginning of a word, the retroflex indicator r may be omitted. This does not produce ambiguity, because no Warlpiri word begins with a plain alveolar consonant. Example: rtari "foot" is written tari.

Morphology


Verbs

Warlpiri verbs are built from a few hundred verb roots, distributed among five conjugation classes. Two of these classes contain the vast majority of verb roots; the other three classes have only a few roots each.
A large class of modifying prefixes, or preverbs, are used to create verbs with specific meanings. For example, the verb root parnka- means "run" when used by itself, while wurulyparnka- means "scurry into hiding". The preverb wuruly- is used with a few other verb roots to form other verbs of hiding or seclusion. Preverbs are sometimes reduplicated for emphasis or to create a meaning distinction.
Most preverb-verb combinations are a fixed part of the lexicon; new combinations cannot be created freely. But there are a few preverbs that are very productive and can be combined with many different roots, and some roots will accept almost any preverb.
The verb root is followed by a tense suffix. There are five of these for each conjugation class, as shown in the following table. (Some optional variations have been omitted.)
ClassNonpastPastImperativeImmediate futurePresent
1mijayajunya
2rnirnukakurninya
3nyingungkangkunganya
4rnirnunjalkurninya
5ninuntankunanya

Nouns

Warlpiri nouns are assembled from thousands of roots, with a rich array of derivational techniques such as compounding and derivational suffixes. Plurals are formed by reduplication of the root.

Auxiliary word and agreement suffixes

Each full Warlpiri clause may contain an auxiliary word, which together with the verb suffix serves to identify tense and to clarify the relationship between main and dependent clauses. Common auxiliaries include ka (present tense), kapi (future tense), kaji(conditional). The auxiliary word is almost always the second word of a clause.
The auxiliary word also functions as the home for an elaborate family of suffixes that specify the person and number of the subject and object of the clause. These are similar to the familiar conjugational suffixes that agree with the subject in Indoeuropean languages, but in Warlpiri they are placed on the auxiliary instead of on the verb, and they agree with the object as well as the subject.
An example of a suffixed auxiliary word can be seen in the farewell, kapirnangku nyanyi, "I will see you." Here, kapi indicates future tense, -rna is the suffix for first person singular subject "I", -ngku indicates second person singular object "you", and nyanyi is the nonpast form of the class 3 verb "see".
In the past tense, the auxiliary word often drops out completely. In this case, the agreement suffixes attach instead to the first or second word of the clause, as in nyangurnangku, "I saw you".
The junction where the agreement suffixes are attached can trigger progressive vowel harmony. Thus, nyanyi kapingki, "(S)he will see you", shows the vowel of the suffix -ngku(second person singular object) assimilating to the final vowel of kapi.

Avoidance register


In Warlpiri culture, it is considered impolite or shameful for certain family relations to converse. (For example, a woman should not converse with her son-in-law.) If such conversation is necessary, the speakers use a special style of the Warlpiri language called the avoidance register. The avoidance register has the same grammar as ordinary Warlpiri, but a drastically reduced lexicon; most content words are replaced either by a generic synonym or by a word unique to the avoidance register.

Warlpiri Sign Language


The Warlpiri language has a signed as well as a spoken mode. See main article Warlpiri Sign Language.

Notes


  1. ^ "Census 2016, Language spoken at home by Sex (SA2+)"stat.data.abs.gov.au. ABS. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  2. ^ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Warlpiri"Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. ^ C15 Warlpiri at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
  4. ^ Laurie Bauer, 2007, The Linguistics Student's Handbook, Edinburgh
  5. ^ https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=JNAv1c2n38U
  6. ^ https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=F7lEOgLhTrY

References


  • Nash, David (1980). Topics in Warlpiri Grammar, PhD thesis, MIT.
  • Laughren, Hoogenraad, Hale, Granites (1996).  A Learner's Guide to Warlpiri: Tape course for beginners, IAD Press, Alice Springs.