4.6. Other Tertiary obsidian in the Colca valley

Other Barroso group deposits in the region include Pampa Finaya on the north side of the Colca River. In the course of his archaeological survey Steven Wernke (2003: 36, 39) surveyed Pampa Finaya and, unlike in the Chivay source area, obsidian was not found on the perimeter of this Barroso flow where it contacts Tacaza layers. However, Wernke identified an obsidian source to the west on Cerro Caracachi, a distinctive knob-shaped peak at the head of Quebrada Huancallpucy that is at a contact zone between a layer described by INGEMMET as an porphyritic intrusive material (T-po). This source was exposed in a distinct stratigraphic context and that the obsidian appeared to be of low quality for knapping as compared with the Chivay type.

/Figs_Ch4/surv_geology_west-2.jpg

Figure 4-23. Geological map units with Uyo Uyo sampling locations. See Figure 4-14 for legend. Selected archaeological sites in the main Colca Valley shown in blue.

On 30 Nov. 2003, I visited the area of Cerro Masita and Cerro Caracachi on the suggestion by Wernke (2003, pers. comm.) in order to collect geological samples, to determine whether higher quality obsidian is encountered on this dome, and to compare the deposits with what had been observed at the Chivay source (see Appendix B4). I approached Cerro Masita was approached from the road in the drainage north-west of Ichupampa and only observed small pieces of low quality obsidian near the summit of Caracachi (documented by Wernke) and on the eastern flanks of Masita. Analysis by at Missouri University Research Reactor (Glascock, 2005 pers. comm.) established that this material belongs to the "Uyo Uyo" chemical group first recognized in samples provided by Sarah Brooks (1998: 443-445). In 1993 Brooks collected modified and unmodified nodules from the site of "Uyo Uyo" near Coporaque that were analyzed at MURR in 1995. Brooks (1998: 443-445) writes that the geological origin of these nodules was not determined, but the presumption was that the source lay uphill from the site of Uyo Uyo, as there were many unmodified nodules at the site, an observation that was confirmed by these hikes. No large nodules were encountered, however, and it appears that the Chivay source east of Chivay remains the sole source of high quality obsidian in large nodule form in the Colca valley.

4.6.1. Tripcevich source sampling work

In the course of Upper Colca 2003 survey work geological samples of unmodified obsidian were collected from a variety of natural contexts throughout the Upper Colca study area as well as elsewhere in the Colca valley. In order to best characterize the elemental variability within a chemical type, Shackley (1998: 100-101) recommends collecting samples from throughout the primary and secondary deposition area in sufficiently high numbers to recognize sub-source variability and reduce the chances of mischaracterization.

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Figure 4-24. Bivariate plot showing Dysprosium against Manganese for Tripcevich 2005 samples.


/Figs_Ch4/NKT_sample_map.jpg

Figure 4-25. Map showing locations of Colca valley obsidian source samples analyzed by MURR in 2005.


On Figure 4-24 only samples NT0005, NT0008, and NT0015 fall within the Chivay ellipse giving the impression that there is chemical variability at the Chivay source. Bivariate plots across other elements, however, show that all of the samples fall squarely within the Chivay ellipse.

MURR ID

Result

Region

Description

Quality

Date

Elev

Longitude

Latitude

CQP001

Chivay

Colca

Condorquiña source near Pulpera

Poor

2002

4160

-71.41795

-15.55677

CQP002

Chivay

Colca

Condorquiña source near Pulpera

Poor

2002

4155

-71.41793

-15.55675

CQP003

Chivay

Colca

Condorquiña source near Pulpera

Poor

2002

4160

-71.41795

-15.55677

NT0001

Chivay

Colca

East of Cerro Hornillo

Med

2002

4972

-71.51366

-15.63657

NT0002

Chivay

Colca

Maymeja SE rim along trail departing area at 140°

Good

2003

5003

-71.54049

-15.65356

NT0003

Chivay

Colca

Quarry pit Q02-2, A03-219

Good

2003

4916

-71.53554

-15.64233

NT0004

Chivay

Colca

Chivay

Good

2003

4911

-71.53577

-15.64257

NT0005

Chivay

Colca

Chivay, A03-570. Cortex battered, poss. from glaciers.

Good

2003

4722

-71.55058

-15.64167

NT0006

Chivay

Colca

Chivay, northern Maymeja

Med

2003

4900

-71.53812

-15.63772

NT0007

Chivay

Colca

Chivay, northern Maymeja

Med

2003

4902

-71.53794

-15.63770

NT0008

Chivay

Colca

On western shoulder of Ancachita with ash sample

Med

2001

4622

-71.55493

-15.64239

NT0009

Chivay

Colca

Good

2002

4798

-71.54423

-15.64587

NT0010

Chivay

Colca

Quarry pit Q02-2, A03-219

Good

2003

4915

-71.53556

-15.64247

NT0011

Chivay

Colca

Good

2003

4685

-71.55794

-15.65837

NT0012

Chivay

Colca

Good

2003

4885

-71.53793

-15.64292

NT0013

Uyo Uyo

Colca

W. side of Cerro Caracachi

Poor

2003

4450

-71.67602

-15.61547

NT0014

Uyo Uyo

Colca

East slope of Cerro Masita

Poor

2003

4372

-71.68787

-15.60532

NT0015

Chivay

Ayaviri

Artifact from Yana Salla, Llalli

Good

2001

4200

-70.87933

-14.94699

NT0016

Alca-3

Cotahuasi

Near small rock shelter by top of landslide

Good

2001

4288

-72.73238

-15.11981

NT0017

Alca-1

Cotahuasi

From across valley near old canal

Med

2001

4203

-72.71776

-15.12254

NT0018

Alca-1

Cotahuasi

From across valley near old canal

Med

2001

4202

-72.71776

-15.12254

NT0019

Alca-3

Cotahuasi

Good

2001

4329

-72.73268

-15.11858

NT0020

Alca-1

Cotahuasi

Above Ayawasi

Med

2001

3760

-72.73644

-15.14140

Table 4-5. Peruvian obsidian source samples submitted to MURR by Tripcevich in 2002 and 2005. Coordinate datum is WGS84.

Three samples were provided from the low-quality Condorquiña source in the Pulpera area that were collected in 2002 in order to evaluate the chemical variability within the Chivay source. While the quality was poor, this characterization demonstrates further association between that the Chivay obsidian chemical type and the Pliocene Barroso lava flows evident in the Colca valley. One artifactual sample that turned out to be Chivay was from the town of Llalli close to Ayaviri, in Puno.

Additional samples were submitted from the Alca source collected during fieldwork in 2001 from an exposure described by Justin Jennings (Pers comm. 2001) to the west and south of Cerro Aycano. Kurt Rademaker and colleagues (2004) have since encountered much larger obsidian exposures to the east of this area, on moraines located on the northern slopes of Nevado Firura at approximately 4700 masl.