Household networks and emergent territory: a GIS study of Chumash households, villages and rock-art in South-Central California

Robinson, David Wayne orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-0729-5011 and Wienhold, M (2016) Household networks and emergent territory: a GIS study of Chumash households, villages and rock-art in South-Central California. World Archaeology, 48 (3). pp. 363-380. ISSN 0043-8243

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2016.1185378

Abstract

Elite households of the Californian Chumash have been studied in order to understand the development of Late Holocene hunter-gatherer alliance networks. Equally, models of what has been termed ‘tribelet territories’ have been used to describe land ownership within larger Californian concepts. Surprisingly little research has explicitly addressed issues of how such territories may have developed. In this article, we turn to DeLanda’s philosophy of social complexity to consider how Chumash households may have underpinned the development of tribelet territories and the political implications for their articulation with wider alliances. Importantly, utilizing Geographic Information Systems (GIS), we analyse potential mobility patterns in relation to households, villages and rock-art locales in a case from the Emigdiano Chumash. The results suggest that the painting of rock art was imbricated within processes of territorialization, and that the local placement of art reflects which villages were home to particularly high-status households.


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