%0 Journal Article %A Urban, Matthias %A Barbieri, Chiara %+ Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Max Planck Society %T North and South in the ancient Central Andes: Contextualizing the archaeological record with evidence from linguistics and molecular anthropology : %G eng %U https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0007-5EAF-C %R 10.1016/j.jaa.2020.101233 %7 2020-10 %D 2020 %* Review method: peer-reviewed %X The Central Andes are characterized by the early emergence of complex societies and a chequered yet continuous cultural tradition. However, at least for certain points of time in the cultural development, the overall cohesiveness of this ‘culture area’ has been called into question, favoring an alternative perspective that emphasizes the existence of several relatively independent nuclei of development on the North Coast, the southern Peruvian Highlands and the Titicaca basin, with distinct cultural expressions and political organization. Here, we engage archaeological evidence and its interpretation with newly emerging perspectives from linguistics and genetics (modern and ancient DNA), including new targeted genetic analysis, to add fresh evidence to the question of the internal structure and cohesiveness of the ancient Central Andes as a culture area. The double cultural/biological approach points at a North vs. South structure bisecting the Central Andes that becomes appreciable ~2,000 years ago; however, as the evidence from all three disciplines indicates, too, the spheres have remained connected and hence maintained an overall cohesiveness. Our analysis suggests that demographic population structure precedes the constitution of distinct cultural domains, a pattern which is to be verified in other chronological transects in South America and at a global scale. %K Central Andes; Archaeology; Linguistics; Population genetics; State formation; Population structure %Z 1. Introduction 2. Central Andean archaeology: North and South. 3. From archaeology to a broad anthropological perspective: Conceptualization and limitations 4. The view from language 4.1. Perspectives on North-South structure in the Central Andes from 16th century language geography 4.2. Perspectives on North-South structure in the Central Andes from language contact patterns and areal convergence in language structure 5. The view from genetics 5.1. Perspectives on North-South structure in the Central Andes from studies of uniparental markers 5.2. Perspectives on North-South structure in the Central Andes from full genome analyses 5.3. Timing the emergence of population structure in genetics 5.3.1. Introduction 5.3.2. Methods 5.3.3. Results 6. Discussion %J Journal of Anthropological Archaeology %V 60 %] 101233 %I Elsevier %C Amsterdam %@ 0278-4165