En 1961, Bertha Cuevas (1970) excavó once de los entonces cincuenta y cuatro montículos prehispánicos visibles en El Carrizal con el objeto de estudiar los sistemas constructivos. De acuerdo con los materiales recuperados, autores como Daneels (2005) y Kurosaki (2006) ubicaron el asentamiento en el Formativo Terminal (100 a.C. a 100 d.C.). El presente artículo se centra en la aplicación de diferentes metodologías y técnicas de reconocimiento de superficie que empleó el Proyecto Arqueológico El Carrizal en su temporada 2009, mismas que permitieron comprobar que, si bien los materiales de Cuevas fueron correctamente datados para el Formativo, el complejo arquitectónico presentó también una ocupación clara en el Clásico Temprano (100 a 300 d.C.). Por otra parte, se registró un asentamiento más amplio, gracias al hallazgo de 2.186 estructuras en un área de 13,2 km cuadrados. Las mismas no son contemporáneas en su totalidad y datan desde el Formativo Superior (400 a 100 a.C.) hasta el Posclásico Tardío (1350 a 1521 d.C.).
Finalmente, este trabajo expone las problemáticas metodológicas que surgieron durante la temporada, las respuestas y soluciones a las mismas, así como las conclusiones preliminares derivadas de la aplicación de metodologías y técnicas de reconocimiento de superficie para la región de estudio.
As a response to the lack of intensive surveys in the transitional area located between the Mexican Gulf Lowlands and the Sierra Madre Oriental, The Proyecto Arqueológico El Carrizal, Veracruz (PAC) was created in 2008 by the archaeologists Natalia R. Donner and Jonathan Hernández Arana (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México y Universidad Veracruzana).
Located in South Central Veracruz, El Carrizal archaeological site was first excavated by Bertha Cuevas (1970) during 1961 and 1962, who made the extraordinary discovery of Formative frog-shaped yokes associated to human remains and located in sealed Terminal Formative contexts (100 b.C. to 100 a.D.). Results and conclusions of this research were published as a master thesis in 1970 by Universidad Veracruzana. Unfortunately, Cuevas� intervention was only centered on a very small area where a community road was being built; so her research required a wider perspective. Thus, PAC�s study was designed with a focus based on pre-Hispanic settlement patterns, social and political organizations, chronology, among others.
In order to achieve a regional perspective, PAC�s first field season (2009), consisted in a full coverage � high density surface survey, based on Stark and Showalter�s proposals (1990), of a 13.2 square kilometer area. Several methodological and technical modifications were necessary, which are discussed throughout the article. Apart from that, this work presents the methodological problems encountered during this first stage of the research, which were a direct result from the unprecedented high density of pre-Hispanic architectural structures found (273 mounds per square kilometer, a total of 2,186 in eight square kilometers). This feature led to several challenges for surface survey methods and techniques within the study region and Mesoamerica in general. Apart from that, PAC�s team was able to confirm that Cuevas� excavated contexts belonged to the Terminal Formative. The architectural complex also presented a continued occupation through the Early Classic (100 to 300 a.D.).
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