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Chapter 6 describes the importance of textiles, fishing, and maize for Mesoamerican civilization. These products, researchers believe, relate substantively to the particular histories of these civilizations, challenging established beliefs of how civilizations develop. In Peru, an previously-undiscovered civilization called Norte Chico shapes the region in significant ways. In order to construct its formidable stone monuments, centralized government becomes necessary, not only to construct these cultural institutions but to continue these intensive agricultural experiments. However, another important plank of this investigation is a new hypothesis: that the foundations of Andean societies have maritime roots. This hypothesis was not immediately accepted at first, but advances in scientific analysis of late-Pleistocene coastal foragers gives support to the theory. It was not thought that a strongly-maritime civilization would have been able to project power inland, yet careful examination of artifacts and carvings from the region reveal a startling find: a long-running religious tradition, evident in patterns seen on carvings dating from vastly-separated periods. Bearing this in mind, the prehistory of the Andes presents a challenge to prior, Eurocentric ideas of antiquity.
Chapter 6 details the progress and ramifications of several important finds in modern-day Peru. This displays the difficulty of anthropology in this region—not only in the physical work of excavation and cataloguing, but the difficulty of contextualizing and grounding findings in view of contemporary perspectives on historical development. At least two outcomes of this process testify to the difficult, often speculative nature of the work: at first, after some unusual findings, a radical new theory is proposed, but soon rejected following a lack of support. Next, a typical pattern of development from Eurasian civilization fails to appear in the Americas, frustrating the process of piecing together a region or community's history. Only after more materials are accumulated do alternate modes of development, provided by relative separation of the continents, show anthropologists and archaeologists just how much their theories depend on local patterns.
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