The Zoned Bichrome Period in Northwestern Costa Rica

1961 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 505-515 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael D. Coe ◽  
Claude F. Baudez

AbstractIn an attempt to establish an archaeological chronology for northwestern Costa Rica, excavations were carried out in 1959-60 in the coastal region and Tempisque River drainage of Guanacaste Province. Four periods have been defined: Zoned Bichrome, Early Polychrome, Middle Polychrome, and Late Polychrome. These are roughly equated in the Maya sequence with Late Formative, Early Classic through the beginning of Late Classic, the latter part of the Late Classic through the early Postclassic, and late Postclassic, respectively. The Zoned Bichrome period has been established on the basis of three geographically separate but coeval phases: Chombo on the Santa Elena Peninsula, Monte Fresco in the Tamarindo Bay zone, and Catalina on the middle Tempisque. All three phases are linked to each other through trade pottery; a radiocarbon date on Monte Fresco is within the first century of the Christian era. Outstanding characteristics of the period are bichrome zoning, dentate rocker-stamping, wavy black lines produced by a multiple brush, engraving, and incising. Considerable fishing and hunting was carried out, and intensive maize agriculture is inferred. These village materials indicate that lower Central America was participating in at least some of the trait diffusion which linked remote areas of Nuclear America in Formative times.

2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 401-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald K. Faulseit

AbstractA two-year project of survey, surface collection, and excavation on the hill of Cerro Danush within the site of Dainzú-Macuilxóchitl in Oaxaca, Mexico, was focused on identifying and characterizing the Late Classic (A.D. 600–850/900) and Early Postclassic (A.D. 850/900–1300) components of the site, which coincide with the political fragmentation and reorganization of complex society within the Valley of Oaxaca. The transition in sociopolitical organization from the Classic to Postclassic has been the subject of several research projects, but few, if any, have clearly identified an Early Postclassic settlement. A radiocarbon analysis of charcoal samples collected during the excavation of a residential complex on Cerro Danush reveals its most recent period of occupation to be between A.D. 1000 and 1300, placing it firmly within the Early Postclassic. The excavation data are contextualized with data from the surface collection, illuminating patterns of Late Classic political fragmentation and Early Postclassic household resilience. Since Dainzú-Macuilxóchitl emerged in the Late Postclassic (A.D. 1300–1521) as a powerful city-state, exploring its Early Postclassic component contributes to the study of how societies reorganize on a local level after the collapse of centralized authority, such as the Classic period Monte Albán state.


Author(s):  
Alexandre Tisseaux Navarro ◽  
Mauro Vargas Hernández ◽  
Daniel Ballestero Sakson ◽  
Juan Pablo Salazar Ceciliano ◽  
Sergio Cambronero Solano ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

El Área Marina de Manejo de bahía Santa Elena (BSE) es un sitio importante para las comunidades cercanas debido a su potencial turístico y pesquero. El objetivo de este trabajo es comprender algunos aspectos de la hidrografía de BSE. Se establecieron dos transectos transversales al canal principal de la bahía Santa Elena para la medición de corrientes, temperatura, concentración clorofila, oxígeno disuelto, salinidad y turbidez; además, se realizó un levantamiento batimétrico del área. El movimiento del agua en BSE está influenciadas por la batimetría; y las variaciones en las condiciones meteorológicas pueden provocar cambios en las características físicas, químicas y biológicas del cuerpo de agua. Comprender estos aspectos puede ser de gran ayuda para realizar un mejor uso de la BSE y de esta forma aprovechar de manera sostenible los recursos que ofrece.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danelle Carr ◽  
◽  
Matthew Loocke ◽  
Jonathan E. Snow
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia Bonilla-Gámez
Keyword(s):  
La Red ◽  

El siguiente artículo propone el diseño de una microred inteligente para la comunidad de Santa Elena, Pérez Zeledón, Costa Rica, con base en Whites Lanes Micro Grid. La propuesta consiste de diez clientes (familias campesinas), cuyas casas de habitación están dotadas con una capacidad fotovoltaica de 2 kW y un medidor inteligente para monitorear el consumo, de acuerdo a una promoción de conciencia sobre el uso racional y eficiente de la energía. La energía eléctrica generada por los paneles, luego de pasar por un microinversor, ingresará a un equipo llamado transverter que administra el flujo de energía entre diferentes posibles fuentes de generación, como son las baterías, los consumidores y la red eléctrica externa. Además, se instalará un sistema de almacenamiento de energía con baterías, para operar de manera autónoma en la noche y en momentos en que la demanda sea mayor que la producción fotovoltaica. También, se conectará a la microred una estación de carga de vehículos eléctricos abastecida por veinticuatro paneles solares, para promover el uso de este tipo de medio de transporte y de este tipo de infraestructuras en la comunidad y en el país.


1987 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 367-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce H. Dahlin ◽  
Robin Quizar ◽  
Andrea Dahlin

Based on published lexicostatistical dates, two intervals in the prehistory of southern Mesoamerica stand out as fertile periods in terms of the generation of new languages: the Terminal Preclassic/early Early Classic Periods, and the Early Postclassic Period. After comparing archaeological evidence with language distributions within the subregions of southern Mesoamerica during the first of these periods, we conclude that the cultural processes during both periods had the same potential for producing rapid rates of linguistic divergences. Just as rapid proliferation of linguistic divisions was symptomatic of the well-known collapse of Late Classic Maya civilization, so it can be taken as a sign of a collapse of Terminal Preclassic civilization. Both collapses were characterized by severe population reductions, site abandonments, an increasing balkanization in material culture, and disruption of interregional communication networks, conditions that were contributory to the kind of linguistic isolation that allows language divergences. Unlike in the Terminal Classic collapse episode, small refuge zones persisted in the Early Classic Period that served as sources of an evolving classicism; these refuge zones were exceptions, however, not the rule. Although the collapse of each site had its own proximate cause, we suggest that the enormous geographical range covered by these Early Classic Period site failures points to a single ultimate cause affecting the area as a whole, such as the onset of a prolonged and devastating climatic change.


Author(s):  
Liz Harvey-Kattou

This chapter argues that cinema has been the primary creative vehicle to reflect on national – tico – identity in Costa Rica in the twenty-first century, and it begins with an overview of the industry. Considering the ways in which film is uniquely positioned to challenge social norms through the creation of affective narratives and through the visibility it can offer to otherwise marginalised groups, this chapter analyses four films by key directors. Beginning with an exploration of Esteban Ramírez’s Gestación, it considers youth culture, gender, and class as non-normative spaces in the city of San José. Similarly, Jurgen Ureña’s Abrázame como antes is then discussed from the point of view of its ground-breaking portrayal of trans women in the capital. Two films shot at the geographic margins of the nation are then discussed, with the uncanny coastline the focus of Paz Fábrega’s Agua fría de mar and the marginalized Afro-Costa Rican province of Limón the focus of Patricia Velásquez’s Dos aguas.


Author(s):  
Nicolás M. Perrone

The legal imagination framing ISDS practice is closely related to how arbitrators connect storytelling with the interpretation of investment treaties and other relevant laws. This chapter examines several influential awards, placing the facts of each dispute within the broader social and political context of the investment, the conflict, and the economic sector. The analysis highlights how arbitrators think of foreign investment relations, and the extent to which they focus on, or silence, issues of distribution, recognition, and embeddedness. The cases are discussed chronologically in order to identify what has changed—and what has not—in arbitrators’ reasoning. Cases covered in this chapter include Santa Elena v. Costa Rica, Metalclad v. Mexico, TecMed v. Mexico, SD Myers v. Canada, Methanex v. USA, Glamis v. USA, Chemtura v. Canada, Occidental v. Ecuador 2, Philip Morris v. Uruguay, and Eli Lilly v. Canada.


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