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abdulhakeem
02-02-06, 10:17 PM
Archaeologists Find Evidence Of Earliest African Slaves Brought To New World

Source: University Of Wisconsin-Madison (http://www.wisc.edu/)
Posted: February 1, 2006

In the early European histories of the New World, there are numerous accounts of African slaves accompanying explorers and colonists.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/images/2006/02/060201185928.jpg
A study by James Burton and T. Douglas Price of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Vera Tiesler of the Autonomous University of the Yucatan provides the earliest definitive link between the African Diaspora and the New World. Digging in a colonial-era graveyard in Campeche, one of the oldest European cities in Mexico, archaeologists found and researchers chemically analyzed what they believe are the oldest remains of slaves brought from African to the New World. Pictured here is a grave where skeletons of Africans were found in the cemetery in Campeche, Mexico. (Photo courtesy of T. Douglas Price)

Now, digging in a colonial era graveyard in one of the oldest European cities in Mexico, archaeologists have found what they believe are the oldest remains of slaves brought from Africa to the New World. The remains date between the late-16th century and the mid-17th century, not long after Columbus first set foot in the Americas.

The discovery is to be reported in an upcoming edition of the American Journal of Physical Anthropology by a team of researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Autonomous University of the Yucatan.

The African origin of the slaves was determined through the reading of telltale signatures locked at birth into the tooth enamel of individuals by strontium isotopes, a chemical which enters the body through the food chain as nutrients pass from bedrock through soil and water to plants and animals. The isotopes found in the teeth are an indelible signature of birthplace, as they can be directly linked to the bedrock of specific locales, giving archaeologists a powerful tool to trace the migration of individuals on the landscape.

The new study, which was supported by the National Science Foundation, draws on isotope ratios found in the teeth of four individuals from among 180 burials found in a multiethnic burial ground associated with the ruins of a colonial church in Campeche, Mexico, a port city on the Yucatan Peninsula.

The new isotopic studies are important, according to the new report's authors, James Burton and T. Douglas Price of UW-Madison and Vera Tiesler of the Autonomous University of the Yucatan, because they provide the earliest definitive physical link between the African Diaspora and the New World. Over a span of nearly 400 years, as many as 12 million people were placed in bondage and brought across the Atlantic under horrific conditions to work, primarily, in the mines and plantations of the New World.

"This is the earliest documentation of the African Diaspora in the New World," says Price, a UW-Madison professor of anthropology. "It does mean that slaves were brought here almost as soon as Europeans arrived."

In early colonial Mexico, Campeche was an important Spanish gateway to the New World. It served as a base for exploration and conquest and was a key defensive outpost in a region infested with pirates. Presumably, slaves from the infamous West African port of Elmina were shipped to Campeche where they may have been used as domestic servants.

The discovery of the remains of slaves born in Africa from such an early date shows that slavery became an integral aspect of the New World economy not long after the Conquistadors completed the subjugation of Mexico, says Price.

Archaeological and historical evidence, including a map of colonial Campeche, suggest the graveyard was in use from about 1550 to the late 1600s. It was uncovered, along with the foundations of a colonial era church, in 2000 by construction workers digging around Campeche's central park. The site was excavated under the direction of Tiesler.

The archaeologists were drawn to some of the individuals buried in the colonial cemetery because of distinctive dental mutilations, a decorative practice characteristic of Africa.

Burton and Price, in collaboration with Tiesler, are conducting a much broader study of human mobility in ancient Mesoamerica using isotopic analysis. They conducted a blind study of the isotopic content of teeth from 10 individuals from the Campeche churchyard. Four of the samples, says Burton, "were like something we'd never seen."

The ratios, he explains, were well off the charts for anyone born in Mesoamerica. Instead, they reflected the geology of West Africa, which is underlain by a massive shield of ancient rock, much older than the geology of Mexico and Central America.

The chemical analysis, combined with the distinctive dental mutilation, provides strong evidence that "these folks were born in Africa and brought to the New World," says Price. " The thing that impresses me is that it was happening so early. "

African slaves were brought to the New World as the Spanish needed labor to harvest timber and work in the mines that enriched Spain. Early in their rule, the Spanish enslaved Indians to perform heavy labor, but they turned to the African slave trade as diseases introduced by Europeans decimated native peoples.

Editor's Note: The original news release can be found here (http://www.news.wisc.edu/releases/12076.html).

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/02/060201185928.htm

abdulhakeem
02-02-06, 10:20 PM
African slaves were in New World in 1500s

Jan. 31, 2006
Associated Press

WAUSAU, Wis. - Researchers have found the remains of African slaves in a 16th century Mexican graveyard, confirming historical accounts that slavery began in the New World not long after Europeans conquered Mexico, according to a new study.

The graves were discovered near the ruins of a colonial church in Campeche, Mexico, a port city on the Yucatan Peninsula. The authors of the study being released Tuesday say the remains are the earliest physical evidence of slavery in North America.

University of Wisconsin-Madison anthropology professor T. Douglas Price, who helped conduct the study, said the remains confirm historical descriptions of the beginning of slavery in the New World.

“It underscores very vividly that in the Spanish world, slaves were being brought into the colonies right from the very start,” said Matthew Restall, a professor of colonial Latin American history at Penn State University.

Details of the study will be published in an upcoming edition of the American Journal of Physical Anthropology.

The cemetery and the foundation of the church were uncovered in 2000 by construction workers digging around Campeche’s central park. The site was then excavated under the direction of the Autonomous University of the Yucatan.

Archaeologists found fragmented remains of four Africans who were likely young to middle-age men, Price said.

Researchers identified the slave remains by looking for a chemical in tooth enamel linked to the bedrock of their native Africa. Some teeth also had a distinctive mutilation recognized as a decorative practice common among Africans.

The remains dated from the late 1500s to the mid-1600s. Archaeological and historical evidence suggested the graveyard was used from about 1550 to the late 1600s, Price said.

“Part of what is surprising and interesting about this is where the bones are. They are right in the middle of the city,” Restall said.

That means African slaves were given Christian burials on hallowed ground within the city walls but separate from the Spaniards. Such practices contrasted sharply with the way slaves were treated on plantations farther north, he said.

“I think it is particularly interesting because you have African slaves from Africa, you have Europeans from Spain and you have Maya Indians who were in this region initially all together in this church cemetery,” Price said.

Early in their rule, the Spanish enslaved Indians to perform heavy labor but turned to African slaves as European diseases decimated native populations, researchers said.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11111366/

abdulhakeem
02-02-06, 10:27 PM
Excavated Teeth Likely Came from First Africans Brought to the New World

Thursday, February 02, 2006
InfoZine Staff

Europeans may have imported slaves in the 1500s

Washington, D.C. - infoZine - Forensic details obtained from human teeth excavated from a church graveyard in Mexico suggests Europeans brought slaves from Africa to the New World as long ago as the late 1500s to work as servants and on the docks of coastal Central America. According to a report to be published in an upcoming issue of the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, the teeth came from people born in Africa and who were probably among the first slaves brought to the Americas.

"It does mean that slaves were brought here almost as soon as Europeans arrived," said T. Douglas Price of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Price and coworker James H. Burton of UW-Madison, and Vera Tiesler of the Autonomous University of the Yucatan, measured a radioactive substance known as strontium in teeth recovered from an early colonial burial ground in Campeche, Mexico, located on the gulf shore of the Yucatan Peninsula. Strontium isotopes are normally found in the soil, but make their way into the food supply when they are dissolved and taken up by plants. Because the substance concentrates in teeth and bones of people and animals that eat the plants, strontium has become a reliable marker not only of the age of human remains but also of their geographic origin.

The National Science Foundation funded the work.

Radioactive strontium in teeth is particularly useful for determining birthplace, because teeth form during gestation and early childhood. The type of strontium found in teeth mirrors that deposited in the bedrock of the area where a person was born. By comparing the isotopes in teeth recovered from the graveyard with known strontium values for geologic regions around the world, the scientists were able to determine if the individuals were born in Africa or the New World.

The values Price and his coworkers found in the teeth "coincides closely with the region inland from the Gold Coast," the report says, "infamous as the center of the African slave trade during the late 16th and 17th century."

"These individuals are likely to be among the earliest representatives of the African Diaspora in the Americas, substantially earlier than the subsequent, intensive slave trade of the 18th century."

http://www.infozine.com/news/stories/op/storiesView/sid/12717/

gaara
04-02-06, 06:36 AM
dude, just a question, what is the point of this thread?