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    Places of life, places of death: caves in pre-Hispanic Huachichil conscience in northern Mexico

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    Author
    Prashby, Kate
    Chair
    Cannon, Chris
    Committee
    Koskey, Mike
    John, Theresa
    Kuho, Yoko
    Keyword
    Guachichile
    Social life and customs
    Religion
    Funeral customs and rites
    Craniology
    Caves
    Mexico
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11122/15983
    Abstract
    In 1931, a US geologist took ten skulls from a pre-Hispanic burial cave in historic Huachichil territory in northeastern Mexico and brought them to a US museum. To assist in repatriation efforts, this thesis uses ethnoarchaeology to suggest how ancient Huachichiles may have used caves and what they may have believed about those caves. Drawing from ethnographic accounts from the US Southwest, Aridoamerica, and Mesoamerica, this thesis establishes two possible models of belief that Huachichil cosmology may have followed regarding caves. A second pre­ Hispanic Huachichil burial cave and its surrounding caves are also examined using participant observation and interviews with a local Elder to determine any traditional knowledge related to ancient Huachichil cave use. The bioarchaeological analysis of the ten skulls from the first burial cave sheds some light on ancient Huachichil lifestyles. While there is little remaining traditional knowledge that would indicate ancient Huachichil cave beliefs, experiences with the ten skulls and the second burial cave affirm the Indigenous understanding that human remains are powerful and retain some essence of the person they belonged to. Repatriation is vital because human remains have consciousness and agency and are worthy of respect.
    Description
    Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2025
    Table of Contents
    Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Who are the Huachichiles? -- 1.2 What remains of the past -- 1.3 Cave knowledge -- 1.4 Cosmology -- 1.5 The sacred geography of caves -- 1.6 Cave protocols -- 1.7 Places of power -- 1.8 Summary. Chapter 2: Literature review -- 2.1 Paleolithic cave use -- 2.2 Indigenous cave use in the past five hundred years -- 2.3 The Earth's womb -- 2.4 The Land of the Dead -- 2.5 The Home of the Gods -- 2.6 Cave shelters -- 2.7 Resource storage and extraction -- 2.8 Initiation and power-seeking rituals -- 2.9 Healing and harming rituals -- 2.10 Rain ceremonies -- 2.11 Burial practices -- 2.12 Summary. Chapter 3: Methodology -- 3.1 Theory and methodology -- 3.2 Ethnographic data collection -- 3.3 Ethnoarchaeology -- 3.4 Ethnogeology -- 3.5 Data categories -- 3.6 Research sites -- 3.7 Summary. Chapter 4: Analysis and discussion -- 4.1 Trends in Indigenous cave use -- 4.2 Ancient Huachichil cave use in San Judas Tadeo -- 4.3 Ancient Huachichil cave use in Charcas -- 4.4 Ancient Huachichil cave beliefs -- 4.5 Summary. Chapter 5: Conclusion -- 5.1 Caves as place of power -- 5.2 Changing identities -- 5.3 Repatriation and identity.
    Date
    2025-05
    Type
    Thesis
    Collections
    Indigenous Studies

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