Announcing the Final Examination of Mr. Horvey Manuel Palacios for the degree of Master of Arts in Anthropology

Friday, June 4, 2021 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.

Announcing the Final Examination of Mr. Horvey Manuel Palacios for the degree of Master of Arts in Anthropology

 

BIOARCHAEOLOGICAL AND MORTUARY PATTERNS AT HOLTUN, GUATEMALA: INTEGRATING A COMPARATIVE OSTEOBIOGRAPHIC APPROACH

 

Horvey Manuel Palacios, B.A. University of Miami, 2018

 

Defense Date: Friday June 4th, 2021

Time: 10am (EST)

Virtual Defense Via Zoom

Join Zoom Meeting: https://ucf.zoom.us/j/97767125835?pwd=aGFCckg4d2NMV2hZM25XbzErNWxGQT09&from=addon

Meeting passcode: 391399

 

Abstract:

Bioarchaeological analysis can help identify patterns of mortuary ritual and social experience of ancient Maya peoples. However, there is limited bioarchaeological and mortuary evidence for the relationship between the development of social complexity and social experience. Particularly, how is social organization reflected in patterns of burial practice and skeletal markers of stress. This thesis uses osteobiographies to contextualize the mortuary and biological profiles of 18 individuals interred at the Maya site of Holtun, Guatemala to examine bioarchaeological variation during the Preclassic (800 B.C. – A.D. 250) and Late Classic (A.D. 550– 900) periods. This work highlights the integration of comparative osteobiographic analyses from small samples into the exploration of individual identities and social experiences. By incorporating architectural contexts, mortuary evidence, and osteology, the individual becomes the focus of study. When each individual is examined for mortuary features, sex, age, and evidence of stress, these lives in focus become salient portraits of ancient humans as complex social beings with intertwined identities at Holtun, essentially deploying a bioarchaeology of personhood. Results of this thesis identified common trends of the mortuary program and biological health status of individuals throughout the chronology of Holtun. Individuals were most commonly interred in simple graves or cists in an extended supine position with head oriented to the north. Additionally, very few indicators of childhood stress or systemic pathology were identified, though females at Holtun seemed to disproportionately suffer from carious lesions compared to males. In addition to these trends, evidence for intentional body modification, individual mortuary assemblages, and daily activity stress markers all indicate variation in the social identities of these individuals. Overall, this study affirms the strength that a small sample can have in contributing to the exploration of social organization and identity reflected through a contextualized osteobiographic approach. These results enhance our understanding of increasing mortuary and biological variation during the Preclassic and Late Classic period southern Maya lowlands, and offer new insight into the complex development of social organization and individual social experience at Holtun, Guatemala.

 

 

Outline of Studies:

Major: Anthropology

 

Thesis Committee:

Dr. J. Marla Toyne, Co-Chair

Dr. Michael Callaghan, Co-Chair

Dr. Brigette Kovacevich

Dr. Amanda Groff

 

Approved for distribution by Dr. J. Marla Toyne, Committee co-Chair, on May 21st, 2021. 

The public is welcome to attend.

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Anthropology Department Calendar

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Academic

Tags:

Bioarchaeology Thesis and Dissertation Anthropology