%0 Journal Article %T FARMING AND CATASTROPHE AT LA JOYA: A CONSIDERATION OF AGRICULTURAL INTENSIFICATION AND RISK IN THE FORMATIVE SIERRA DE LOS TUXTLAS (Agricultura y cat¨¢strofe en La Joya: un examen de la intensificaci¨®n agr¨ªcola y riesgo en el per¨ªodo Formativo de la Sierra de los Tuxtlas) %A Amber M. VanDerwarker %J Arqueolog¨ªa Iberoamericana %D 2009 %I Arqueolog¨ªa Iberoamericana %X This paper examines the process of agricultural intensification as it occurred during the Formative period (1400 BC-AD 300) along the southern Gulf Coast of Mexico. Over the course of two millennia, rural villagers living in the Olmec hinterland of the Sierra de los Tuxtlas invested more time and labor into farming activities as they became increasingly sedentary and dealt with episodic volcanic eruptions and ash fall. This period of time witnessed the development of a regional political hierarchy in the Tuxtlas, which also had consequences for village-level subsistence. In examining agricultural intensification in the context of volcanic catastrophe and political development, I analyze archaeological plant and animal data from the site of La Joya, a farming village located in southern Veracruz, Mexico spanning the Formative period. The subsistence data indicate that maize intensification was a long, incremental process that began in the Middle Formative period, hundreds of years before political development and the establishment of a regional center. At the close of the Late Formative period, after the region's political consolidation, a severe volcanic eruption blanketed the region with ash, leading to significant, if temporary, environmental circumscription. La Joya villagers responded to this catastrophe by intensifying maize production on infields and expanding their hunting and fishing territories to exploit a wider range of animal prey. ESPA OL: Este estudio examina el proceso de sedentarizaci¨®n, intensificaci¨®n agr¨ªcola y desarrollo de una jerarqu¨ªa pol¨ªtica regional durante el per¨ªodo Formativo (1400 a. C.-300 d. C.) a lo largo de la costa meridional del Golfo de M¨¦xico, en la zona olmeca de la Sierra de los Tuxtlas. Los resultados obtenidos analizando los datos de animales y plantas provenientes del sitio de La Joya, un pueblo agr¨ªcola ubicado en el sur de Veracruz (M¨¦xico) que abarca todo el Formativo, indican que la intensificaci¨®n del ma¨ªz fue un proceso largo y gradual que se inici¨® en la fase media de esta etapa, cientos de a os antes del establecimiento de un centro regional. A finales del Formativo Tard¨ªo, despu¨¦s de su consolidaci¨®n pol¨ªtica, una severa erupci¨®n volc¨¢nica cubri¨® con ceniza la regi¨®n. Los aldeanos de La Joya respondieron a esta cat¨¢strofe incrementando la producci¨®n de ma¨ªz en las inmediaciones y ampliando sus territorios de caza y pesca para explotar una gama m¨¢s amplia de animales. %K olmeca %K formativo %K zooarqueologia %K paleoetnobotanica %K intensificacion agricola %K riesgo %K olmec %K formative %K zooarchaeology %K paleoethnobotany %K agricultural intensification %K risk %U http://www.laiesken.net/arqueologia/archivo/2009/01/2.html