Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T15:40:47.486Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Part I - The Americas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 August 2022

Bernardo Urbani
Affiliation:
Venezuelan Institute for Scientific Research
Dionisios Youlatos
Affiliation:
Aristotle University, Thessaloniki
Andrzej T. Antczak
Affiliation:
Universiteit Leiden
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
World Archaeoprimatology
Interconnections of Humans and Nonhuman Primates in the Past
, pp. 11 - 198
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

Acosta, J. A. (1958–1959). Exploraciones arqueológicas en Monte Albán, XVIII Temporada. Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropológicos, 15, 750.Google Scholar
Aguilera, C. (2002). Los quetzales de Teotihuacán. In Ruiz-Gallut, M. E., ed., Ideología y política a través de materiales, imágenes y símbolos. Memoria de la Primera Mesa Redonda de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 399410.Google Scholar
Angulo-Villaseñor, J. (2002). Formación del estado teotihuacano y su impacto en los señoríos mayas. In Ruiz-Gallut, M. E., ed., Ideología y política a través de materiales, imágenes y símbolos. Memoria de la Primera Mesa Redonda de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 359329.Google Scholar
Anonymous (2018). Élite maya residió en Teotihuacan, revelan hallazgos en la Plaza de las Columnas. Boletín de la Dirección de Medios de Comunicación del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 335 (September 22), 13.Google Scholar
Anonymous (2019). Nuevos hallazgos en Teotihuacan revelan relación con mayas entre 350 y 450 d.c. Boletín de la Dirección de Medios de Comunicación del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 175 (June 13), 14.Google Scholar
Baker, M. (1992). Capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) and the ancient Maya. Ancient Mesoamerica, 3, 219228.Google Scholar
Baker, M. (2013). Revisiting capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) and the ancient Maya. Revue de primatologie, 5, document 67.Google Scholar
Berlo, J. C. (1984). Teotihuacan Art Abroad: A Study of Metropolitan Style and Provincial Transformation in Incensario Workshops. Part I. Oxford: BAR Publishing, 199 (i).Google Scholar
Braakhuis, H. E. M. (1987). Artificers of the days: Functions of the howler monkey gods among the Mayas. Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde, 143, 2553.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruner, E., & Cucina, A. (2005). Alouatta, Ateles, and the Mesoamerican cultures. Journal of Anthropological. Sciences, 83, 111118.Google Scholar
Cabrera-Castro, R. (1996). Caracteres glíficos teotihuacanos en un piso de La Ventilla. In de la Fuente, B., ed., La pintura mural prehispánica en México. I. Teotihuacán. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 402427.Google Scholar
Cabrera-Castro, R. (2012). Secuencia constructiva y entierros-ofrenda descubiertos en las excavaciones de la Pirámide la Luna, Teotihuacán. Temas de antropología mexicana, 17, 109133.Google Scholar
Carballo, D. M. (2011). Obsidian and the Teotihuacan State: Weaponry and Ritual Production at the Moon Pyramid. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.Google Scholar
Childs-Rattray, E. (2001). Teotihuacan: Ceramics, Chronology, and Cultural Trends. México: CONACULTURA and Universidad de Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
Clark, J., Hansen, R., & Pérez, T. (2014). La zona maya en el Preclásico. In Manzanilla, L., & López, L., eds., Historia antigua de México. Volumen I, en México antiguo, sus áreas culturales, los orígenes y el horizonte Preclásico. Mexico: Editorial Porrúa, Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, and Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 437509.Google Scholar
Coe, W. R. (1972). Cultural contact between the lowland Maya and Teotihuacan as seen from Tikal, Peten, Guatemala. In Anonymous, ed., Teotihuacán. XI mesa redonda. Mexico: Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología, 257271.Google Scholar
Cook de Leonard, C. (1957). El origen de la cerámica Anaranjado delgado. Master’s thesis, Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
Cormier, L., & Urbani, B. (2008). The ethnoprimatology of the spider monkeys (Ateles spp.): from past to present. In Campbell, C. J., ed., Spider Monkeys: Behavior, Ecology and Evolution of the Genus Ateles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 377403.Google Scholar
Cowgill, G. L. (1997). State and society at Teotihuacan, México. Annual Review of Anthropology, 26, 129–61.Google Scholar
Daneels, A. (2002). Presencia de Teotihuacán en el centro y sur de Veracruz. In Ruiz-Gallut, M. E., ed., Ideología y política a través de materiales, imágenes y símbolos. Memoria de la Primera Mesa Redonda de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México e Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 655683.Google Scholar
de la Fuente, B. (1996a). La pintura mural prehispánica en México. I. Teotihuacán. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
de la Fuente, B. (1996b). Tetitla. In De la Fuente, B., ed., La pintura mural prehispánica en México. I. Teotihuacán. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 259312.Google Scholar
Escobedo-Gonzalbo, P. (2017). Vaso trípode con mono que mira. Puebla: Museo del Amparo. Available at: http://museoamparo.com/colecciones/pieza/473/vaso-tripode-con-mono-que-mira (Accessed December 18, 2017)Google Scholar
Emery, K. F., & Thornton, E. K. (2008). Zooarchaeological habitat analysis of ancient Maya landscape changes. Journal of Ethnobiology, 282, 154178.Google Scholar
Fash, W. L. (2002). El legado de Teotihuacán en la ciudad maya de Copan, Honduras. In Ruiz-Gallut, M. E., ed., Ideología y política a través de materiales, imágenes y símbolos. Memoria de la Primera Mesa Redonda de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 715729.Google Scholar
Gamio, M. (1922). La población del valle de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Dirección de Talleres Gráficos del Departamento de la Secretaria de Educación Pública.Google Scholar
García del Cueto, H. (1989). Acerca de la connotación simbólico-ritual del mono en la sociedad prehispánica (Altiplano Central). In Estrada, A., & López-, R. Wilchis, , eds., Primatología en México: Comportamiento, ecología, aprovechamiento y conservación de primates. Memorias del Primer Simposio Nacional de Primatología. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, 144159.Google Scholar
Gómez-Chávez, S. (2000a). La Ventanilla. Un barrio de la antigua ciudad de Teotihuacán. Tomo I. Honor thesis, Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
Gómez-Chávez, S. (2000b). La Ventanilla. Un barrio de la antigua ciudad de Teotihuacán. Tomo III. Honor thesis, Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
Gómez-Chávez, J. (2002). Presencia del occidente de México en Teotihuacán. Aproximación a la política exterior del estado teotihuacano. In Ruiz-Gallut, M. E., ed., Ideología y política a través de materiales, imágenes y símbolos. Memoria de la Primera Mesa Redonda de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 563625.Google Scholar
Henderson, J., & Joyce, R. A. (2004). Human use of animals in prehispanic Honduras. In Emery, K. F., ed., Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory. Los Angeles: University of California at Los Angeles, 223236.Google Scholar
INAH (2017). Vasija silbadora. Museo Nacional de Antropología. Mexico: Dirección de Mediateca-Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Available at: http://mediateca.inah.gob.mx/islandora_74/islandora/object/objetoprehispanico%3A18508 (Accessed December 17, 2017)Google Scholar
INAH (2018). Cabeza de mono. Museo de sitio de Teteles de Santo Nombre. Mexico: Dirección de Mediateca-Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Available at: http://hool.inah.gob.mx:1147/es/museos-inah/museo/museo-piezas/15052-15052-cabeza-de-mono.html?lugar_id=472&item_lugar=14640&seccion=lugar (Accessed July 3, 2018)Google Scholar
Kidder, A. V., Jennings, J. D., & Shook, E. M. (1946). Excavations at Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala. State College: Pennsylvania State University Press.Google Scholar
Kolb, C. C. (1987). Marine Shell Trade and Classic Teotihuacan, Mexico. Oxford: BAR Publishing.Google Scholar
Kubler, G. (1972a). Los pájaros de Quetzalpapalotl. In Anonymous, ed., Teotihuacán. XI mesa redonda. Mexico: Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología, 87101.Google Scholar
Kubler, G. (1972b). La iconografía del arte teotihuacano. Ensayo de análisis configurativo. In Anonymous, ed., Teotihuacán. XI mesa redonda. Mexico: Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología, 6985.Google Scholar
Langley, J. C. (1986). Symbolic Notation of Teotihuacan. Oxford: BAR Publishing.Google Scholar
Laporte-Molina, J. P. (1989). Alternativas del clásico temprano en la relación Tikal-Teotihuacán. Grupo 6 C-XVI, Tikal, Peten, Guatemala. PhD thesis, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Litvak-King, J. (1970). Xochicalco en la Caída del Clásico: Una hipótesis. Anales de Antropología, 7, 131144.Google Scholar
López-Austin, A. (1984). Cuerpo humano e ideología. Vol. 1. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R., & Serrano, C. (1999). Prácticas funerarias en la Ciudad de los Dioses. Mexico: Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico-Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R. (ed.) & Valadez, R. (coord) (2017). El uso de los recursos naturales en un centro de barrio de Teotihuacán: Teopancazco. Mexico: Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico, Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R. (1993). Introducción. In Manzanilla, L., ed., Anatomía de un conjunto residencial teotihuacano en Oztoyahualco. I. Las excavaciones. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 1530.Google Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R. (2015). Cooperation and tensions in multiethnic corporate societies using Teotihuacán, Central Mexico, as a case study. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(30), 92109215.Google Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R. (2016). Los secretos de Teotihuacán. Capítulo 4. Mexico: TV UNAM Available at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9C9Bv2ZIWMGoogle Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R. (2017a). Teotihuacán. Ciudad excepcional de Mesoamérica. Mexico: Opúsculos, El Colegio Nacional.Google Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R. (2017b). The Xalla Palace in Teotihuacan. In Robb, M., ed., Teotihuacan, City of Water, City of Fire. Los Angeles: Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco de Young y University of California Press, 118123.Google Scholar
Manzanilla, L. R., Rodríguez, B., Pérez, G., & Valadez, R. (2011). Arqueozoología y manufactura de vestimentas rituales en la antigua ciudad de Teotihuacán, México. Arqueología, 17, 221246.Google Scholar
Marcus, J. (1983). Teotihuacán visitors on Monte Albán monuments and murals. In Flannery, K. V., & Marcus, J., eds. The Cloud People. Divergent Evolution of the Zopotec and Mixtec Civilizations. New York: Academic Press, 175181.Google Scholar
Marcus, J. (1998). Women’s Ritual in Formative Oaxaca. Figurine-Making, Divination, Death and the Ancestors. Ann Harbor: Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology University of Michigan, Number 33.Google Scholar
Marcus, J. (2008). Monte Albán. Mexico: Colegio de México and Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Marquina, I. (1972). Influencia de Teotihuacán en Cholula. In Anonymous, ed., Teotihuacán. XI Mesa redonda. Mexico: Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología, 241243.Google Scholar
Matos-Moctezuma, E. (1990). Teotihuacán. La metrópolis de los dioses. Madrid: Lunwerg Editores S.A.Google Scholar
Matos-Moctezuma, E. (2009). Teotihuacán. Mexico: Colegio de México and Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Matos-Moctezuma, E. (2017). Historia de la arqueología del México antiguo I. Mexico: El Colegio Nacional.Google Scholar
Meza-Peñaloza, A. (2015). Afinidades biológicas y contextos culturales en los antiguos teotihuacanos. México: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas-Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Miller, A. G. (1973). The Mural Paintings of Teotihuacan. Washington: Harvard-Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Moholy-Nagy, H. (2004). Vertebrates in Tikal burials and caches. In Emery, K. F., ed., Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory. Los Angeles: University of California at Los Angeles, 193222.Google Scholar
Nájera-Coronado, M. I. (2012). El mono y el cacao: La búsqueda de un mito a través de los relieves del grupo de la serie inicial de Chichén Itzá. Estudios de Cultura Maya, 29, 133172.Google Scholar
Nájera-Coronado, M. I. (2013). Un acercamiento al simbolismo del simio entre los grupos mayas. In Millones, L., & López-Austin, A., eds., Fauna fantástica de Mesoamérica y los Andes. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 211252.Google Scholar
Nájera-Coronado, M. I. (2015). Dioses y seres de viento en los antiguos maya. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas-Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Nájera-Coronado, M. I. (2016). El mono y el cacao: a la búsqueda de un mito. In Ruz-Sosa, M. H., eds.,Kakaw, oro aromado. De las cortes mayas a las europeas. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas-Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Noguera, E. (1965). La cerámica arqueológica de Mesoamérica. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
O’Neil, M E. (2018). Forces of Nature: Ancient Maya Arts from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Beijing: Shenzhen Museum-LACMA.Google Scholar
Ortiz-Maciel, D., & Serrano-Rojas, G. (2016). Exposición “John Paddock y la identificación del estilo ñuiñe. Indagaciones en el pasado de la Mixteca Baja.” Oaxaca: Fundación Alfredo Harp Helú. Available at: http://fahho.mx/blog/2016/09/07/exposicion-john-paddock-y-la-identificacion-del-estilo-nuine-indagaciones-en-el-pasado-de-la-mixteca-baja/ (Accessed June 5, 2018)Google Scholar
Ortiz-Martínez, T., & Rico-Gray, V. (2005). Monos araña (Ateles geoffroyi) habitando una selva baja caducifolia en el distrito de Tehuantepec, Oaxaca Mexico. Programa y libro de resúmenes del II Congreso Mexicano de Primatología: n/p.Google Scholar
Paz-Avendaño, R. (2019). Hallan restos de mono araña en una ofrenda de Teotihuacán. La Crónica Diaria (crónica.com.mx). Available at: www.cronica.com.mx/notas-hallan_restos_de_mono_arana_en_una_ofrenda_de_teotihuacan-1122246-2019Google Scholar
Paddock, J. (1972). Distribución de rasgos teotihuacanos en Mesoamérica. In Anonymous, ed., Teotihuacán. XI mesa redonda. Mexico: Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología, 223239.Google Scholar
Pérez, G. (2005). El estudio de la industria del hueso trabajado: Xalla, un caso teotihuacano. Honor thesis, Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
Peterson, J. F. (1994). Sacred Gifts: Precolumbian Art and Creativity. Santa Barbara: Santa Barbara Museum of Art.Google Scholar
Piña-Chan, R. (1993). El lenguaje de las piedras. Glífica olmeca y zapoteca. Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Pohl, M. D. (1976). Ethnozoology of the Maya: An analysis of fauna from five sites in the Peten, Guatemala. PhD thesis, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Pohl, M. D. (2004). The ethnozoology of the Maya: Faunal remains from five sites in Peten, Guatemala. In Willey, G. R., ed., Excavations at Seibal. Department of Peten, Guatemala. Cambridge, MA: Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, 143174.Google Scholar
Preuss, K. T. (1901). Der Affe in der mexikanischen Mythologie. Ethnologisches Notizblatt, 2, 6676.Google Scholar
Rice, P. M., & South, K. E. (2015). Revisiting monkeys on pots: a contextual consideration of primate imagery on classic lowland Maya pottery. Ancient Mesoamerica, 26(2), 275294.Google Scholar
Rivera-Dorado, M. (1969). Las figuritas teotihuacanas y la colección del Museo Antonio Ballesteros. Revista de Antropología Americana, 4, 93111.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, B. (2002). Fauna del proyecto Xalla 2001–2002. Unpublished report, Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, B. (2006). El uso diferencial del recurso faunístico en Teopancazco, y su importancia en las áreas de actividad. Master’s thesis, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, B. (2010). Captura, preparación y uso diferencial de la ictiofauna encontrada en el sitio arqueológico de Teopancazco, Teotihuacán. PhD thesis, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, B. (2017). Capítulo 4. Los recursos animales costeros. In Manzanilla, L., ed., & Valadez, R., (coord.) El uso de los recursos naturales en un centro de barrio de Teotihuacán: Teopancazco. Mexico: Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico, Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 185273.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, B., & Valadez, R. (2014). Recursos Costeros en la Ciudad de los Dioses. In Götz, Ch., & Emery, K., eds., La arqueología de los animales de Mesoamérica. Atlanta: Lockwood Press, 5182.Google Scholar
Ruiz-Gallut, M. A. (1999). Teotihuacán a través de sus imágenes pintadas. In De la Fuente, B., ed., Pintura mural prehispánica. Barcelona: Lunweg Editores, 4166.Google Scholar
Ruiz-Gallut, M. E. (2002). Imágenes de Tetitla: De disfraces y vecinos. In Ruiz-Gallut, M. E., ed., Ideología y política a través de materiales, imágenes y símbolos. Memoria de la Primera Mesa Redonda de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 315329.Google Scholar
Salinas-Cesáreo, J. (2018). Descubren en Teotihuacán cuatro grandes depósitos arqueológicos. Periódico La Jornada, Sept. 22, p. 2. Available at: www.jornada.com.mx/2018/09/22/cultura/a02n1culGoogle Scholar
Scott, S. (2005). Las figurillas de terracota de las excavaciones de Sigvald Linné en Teotihuacán. Mexico: Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc.Google Scholar
Séjourné, L. (1959). Un palacio en la ciudad de los dioses. Exploraciones en Teotihuacán, 1955–1958. Mexico: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
Séjourné, L. (1966a). Arquitectura y pintura en Teotihuacán. Mexico: Editorial Siglo XXI.Google Scholar
Séjourné, L. (1966b). Arqueología de Teotihuacán. La cerámica. Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Séjourné, L. (1966c). El lenguaje de las formas. Mexico: Editorial Siglo XXI.Google Scholar
Serrano-Sánchez, C., Rivero de La Calle, M., & Yépez-Vázquez, R. (2003). La deformación cefálica intencional en los habitantes prehispánicos del barrio teotihuacano de La Ventilla. In Serrano-Sánchez, C., ed., Contextos arqueológicos y osteología del barrio de La Ventilla (Teotihuacán (1992–1994). Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 103113.Google Scholar
Solís, F. (2009). Teotihuacan, Cite des Dieux. Paris: Somogy éditions d’art.Google Scholar
SouthK. E. (2005). Monkeying around the Maya region: A four-field look at primate iconography and the Maya. Master’s thesis, Southern Illinois University.Google Scholar
Starbuck, D. R. (1987). Faunal evidence for the Teotihuacan subsistence base. In McClung de Tapia, E., & Childs-Rattray, E., eds., Teotihuacán. Nuevos datos, nuevas síntesis, nuevos problemas. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 7690.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, N. (2014). Animals and sacred mountains; How ritualized performances materialized state ideologies at Teotihuacan, Mexico. PhD thesis, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, N., Pérez, G., Rodríguez, B., Torres, F., & Valadez, R. (2014). Animals and the State: The Role of Animals in State-Level Rituals in Mesoamerica. In Arbuckle, B. S., & McCarty, S. A., eds. Animals and Inequality in the Ancient World. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 1113.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, N., Somerville, A. D., & Schoeninger, M. J. (2015). Stable isotopes and zooarchaeology at Teotihuacan, Mexico reveal earliest evidence of wild carnivore management in Mesoamerica. PLoS ONE, 10(9), e0135635.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sugiyama, N., Valadez, R., & Rodríguez, B. (2017). Faunal acquisition, maintenance, and consumption: how the Teotihuacanos got their meat. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, 9, 6182.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, S., & Cabrera-Castro, R. (2004). Voyage to the Center of the Moon Pyramid. Recent Discoveries in Teotihuacán. Mexico: CONACULTURA-IHAH and Arizona State University.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, S., & López-Lujan, L. (2006a). Sacrificios de consagración en la Pirámide de la Luna. In Sugiyama, S., & López-Lujan, L., eds., Sacrificios de consagración en la pirámide de la Luna. Mexico City: CONACULTURA-INAH, 2552.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, S., & López-Luján, L. (2006b). Simbolismo y función de los entierros dedicatorios de la Pirámide de la Luna en Teotihuacán. In López-Luján, L., Carrasco, D., & Cué, L., eds., Arqueología e historia del centro de México: Homenaje a E. Matos Moctezuma. Mexico City: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 131151.Google Scholar
Sullivan, K. (2007). Haciendo y manipulando el ritual en la ciudad de los dioses: producción y uso de figurillas en Teotihuacán. Mexico: Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc.Google Scholar
Taube, K. A. (2004). Tetitla and the Maya presence at Teotihuacan. In Braswell, G. E., ed., The Maya and Teotihuacan. Reinterpreting Early Classic Interaction. Austin: University of Texas Press, 273314.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2013). Arqueoprimatología: Reflexión sobre una disciplina y dos localidades antropoespeleológicas venezolanas. Boletín de la Sociedad Venezolana de Espeleología, 45, 6668.Google Scholar
Valadez, R. (1992). Impacto del recurso faunístico en la sociedad teotihuacana, PhD thesis, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Valadez, R. (1993). Macrofósiles faunísticos. In Manzanilla, L., ed., Anatomía de un conjunto residencial teotihuacano en Oztoyohualco, Vol. II. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 729813.Google Scholar
Valadez, R. (2014). Monos y jaguares en el universo prehispánico. In Sandoval-Hoffmann, A., Sandoval-Martínez, A., & Saínz, L. I., (coord.), Los artistas responsables en defensa de la fauna. Mexico: Vínculos, Comunidad y Cultura A.C., 296321.Google Scholar
Valadez, R., & Childs-Rattray, E. (1993). Restos arqueológicos relacionados con primates encontrados en la antigua ciudad de Teotihuacán. In, A. Estrada, Rodriguez-Luna, E., Lopez-Wilchis, R., & Coates-Estrada, R., eds., Estudios Primatológicos en México, Vol. 1. Mexico: Biblioteca Universidad Veracruzana, 215232.Google Scholar
Valadez, R., & Ortiz, E. (1993). Apéndice 2. Representaciones zoomorfas en algunos objetos arqueológicos de Oztoyahualco. In Manzanilla, L., ed., Anatomía de un conjunto residencial teotihuacano en Oztoyohualco, Vol. II. Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 826831.Google Scholar
Valadez, R., Rodríguez, B., Cabrera, R., Cowgill, G., & Sugiyama, S. (2002). Híbridos de lobos y perros (tercer acto): hallazgos en la pirámide de Quetzalcoatl de la antigua ciudad de Teotihuacán. Revista de la Asociación Mexicana de Médicos Veterinarios Especialistas en Pequeñas Especies, 13(5–6), 165176, 219–231.Google Scholar
Valadez, R., Rodríguez, B. Christian, J., & Silva, A. F. (2017). Arqueofauna de Teopancazco, dinámicas de uso y cambios en el tiempo. In Manzanilla, L., & Valadez, R., eds., El uso de los recursos naturales en un centro de barrio de Teotihuacán: Teopancazco. Mexico: Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico, Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 39130.Google Scholar
Vargas, E. (1978). Transición del Clásico al Postclásico a través de Ojo de Agua y Teotenango. Honor thesis, Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia.Google Scholar
Webb, M. C. (1978). The significance of the ‘Epiclassic’ period in Mesoamerican prehistory. In Browman, D. I., ed., Cultural Continuity in Mesoamerica. The Hague: Mouton Publishing, 155178.Google Scholar
Wiesheu, W. (2014). La zona oaxaqueña en el preclásico. In Manzanilla, L., & López, L., (coord.) Historia antigua de México. Volumen I, en México antiguo, sus áreas culturales, los orígenes y el horizonte Preclásico. Mexico: Editorial Porrúa, CONACULTURA, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, and Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 407136.Google Scholar
Winter, M., Martínez-López, C., & Herrera-Muzgo, T. A. (2002). Monte Albán y Teotihuacán: Política e ideología. In Ruiz-Gallut, M. E., ed., Ideología y política a través de materiales, imágenes y símbolos. Memoria de la Primera Mesa Redonda de Teotihuacán. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 627644.Google Scholar

References

Adams, R. E. W. (1971). The ceramics of Altar de Sacrificios. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, 63(1). Cambridge: Harvard University.Google Scholar
Baker, M. (1992). Capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) and the ancient Maya. Ancient Mesoamerica, 3, 219228.Google Scholar
Benson, E. P. (1994). The multimedia monkey, or, the failed man: the monkey as artist. In Fields, V., ed., The Seventh Palenque Round Table, 1989. San Francisco: The Pre-Columbian Art Research Institute, 137143.Google Scholar
Bergeson, D. (1996). The positional behavior and prehensile tail use of Alouatta palliata, Ateles geoffroyi, and Cebus capucinus. Unpublished PhD thesis, Washington University.Google Scholar
Boileau, A., Delsol, N., & Emery, K. F. (2020). Human-animal relations in the Maya world. In Hutson, S. R., & Ardren, T., eds., The Maya World. New York: Routledge, 164182.Google Scholar
Bricker, V. R. (1973). Ritual Humor in Highland Chiapas. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Bruce, R. D. (1979). Lacandon Dream Symbolism. Mexico City: Ediciones Euroamericanos.Google Scholar
Cant, J. G. H. (1986). Locomotion and feeding postures of spider and howling monkeys: Field study and evolutionary interpretation. Folia Primatologica, 46(1), 114.Google Scholar
Chapman, C. A. (1988). Patterns of foraging and range use by three species of neotropical primates. Primates, 29(2), 199194.Google Scholar
Coe, M. D. (1973). The Maya Scribe and His World. New York: The Grolier Club.Google Scholar
Coe, M. D. (1977). Supernatural patrons of Maya scribes and artists. In Hammond, N., ed., Social Process in Maya Prehistory. London: Academic Press, 327347.Google Scholar
Coe, M. D. (1982). Old Gods and Young Heroes: The Pearlman Collection of Maya Ceramics. Jerusalem: The Israel Museum.Google Scholar
Cormier, L. A., & Urbani, B. (2008). The ethnoprimatology of spider monkeys (Ateles spp.): from past to present. In Campbell, C. J., ed., Spider Monkeys: Behavior, Ecology, and Evolution of the Genus Ateles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 377403.Google Scholar
Culbert, T. P. (1993). The Ceramics of Tikal—Vessels from the Burials, Caches, and Problematical Deposits: Tikal Report 25A (Vol. 81). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F., & Kuehn, R. E.. (1966). The Behavior of Ateles geoffroyi and Related Species. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections.Google Scholar
Emery, K. F. (2007). Assessing the impact of ancient Maya animal use. Journal of Nature Conservation, 15(3), 184195.Google Scholar
Emmons, L. H., & Feer, F. (1997). Neotropical Rainforest Mammals: A Field Guide. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Gossen, G. H. (1974). Chamulas in the World of the Sun: Time and Space in a Maya Oral Tradition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Hunt, E. (1977). The Transformation of the Hummingbird: Cultural Roots of a Zinacantecan Mythical Poem. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Kaufman, T. S., & Norman, W. M. (1984). An outline of Proto-Ch’olan phonology, morphology, and vocabulary. In Justeson, J. S., & Campbell, L., eds., Phoeneticism in Mayan Hieroglyphic Writing, Institute for Mesoamerican Studies, no. 9. Albany: State University of New York at Albany Press, 77166.Google Scholar
Kerr, J. (2019). The Maya Vase Database. Available at: www.famsi.org, Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Electronic database, Available at: http://research.mayavase.com/kerrmaya.html (Accessed August 28, 2019)Google Scholar
Kinzey, W. G. (1997). New World Primates. New York: Aldine de Gruyter.Google Scholar
La Farge, O., & Byers, D. S. (1931). The Year Bearer’s People. Middle American Research Institute Publication, no 3. New Orleans: Tulane University.Google Scholar
Mazariegos, O. C. (2017). Art and Myth of the Ancient Maya. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Milbrath, S. (1999). Star Gods of the Maya: Astronomy in Art, Folklore, and Calendars. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Miller, M. E., & Taube, K. (1997). An Illustrated Dictionary of the Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Mock, S. B. (1997). Monkey business at Northern River Lagoon: a coastal interaction sphere in Northern Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica, 8, 165183.Google Scholar
Morris, W. F. (1987). Living Maya. New York: Henry N. Abrams.Google Scholar
Nicholson, H. B., & Keber, E. Q. (1983). Art of Ancient Mexico: Treasures of Tenochtitlan. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art.Google Scholar
Nisbett, R. A. (1995). The functional ecology of howling monkey positional behavior: proximate effects of habitat structure, tree architecture, phenopause, and body size upon Alouatta palliata foraging in discrete forest and crown types. PhD dissertation, University of Iowa.Google Scholar
Perera, V., & Bruce, R. D. (1985). The Last Lords of Palenque: The Lacandon Mayas of the Mexican Rain Forest. Boston: Little, Brown Publishers.Google Scholar
Reents-Budet, D. (1994). Painting the Maya Universe. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Rice, P. M., & South, K. E. (2015). Revisiting monkeys on pots: a contextual consideration of primate imagery on Classic lowland Maya pottery. Ancient Mesoamerica, 26(2), 275294.Google Scholar
Ringle, W. M. (1988). Of Mice and Monkeys: The Value and Meaning of T1016, The God C Hieroglyph. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing 18. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research.Google Scholar
Robicsek, F., & Hames, D. M. (1981). The Maya Book of the Dead: The Ceramic Codex. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Rylands, A. B., Groves, C. P., Mittermeier, R. A., & Cortés-Ortiz, L. (2006). Taxonomy and distributions of Mesoamerican primates. In Estrada, A., Garber, P. A., Pavelka, M. S. M., & Luecke, L., eds., New Perspectives in the Study of Mesoamerican Primates: Distribution, Ecology, Behavior, and Conservation. New York: Springer Press, 2979.Google Scholar
Saunders, N. J. (1994). Predators of culture: jaguar symbolism and Mesoamerican elites. World Archaeology, 26(1), 104117.Google Scholar
Saunders, N. J. (1998). Icons of Power: Feline Symbolism in the Americas. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Schele, L., & Miller, M. E. (1986). The Blood of Kings: Dynasty and Ritual in Maya Art. Fort Worth, TX: Kimbell Art Museum.Google Scholar
Sharer, R. J., & Traxler, L. P. (2006). The Ancient Maya. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
South, K. E. (2005). Monkeying around the Maya region: a four-field look at primate iconography and the Maya. MA thesis Southern Illinois University Carbondale.Google Scholar
Smith, R. E. (1955). The Ceramic Sequence of Uaxactún, Guatemala. Middle American Research Institute Publication No. 20. New Orleans: Tulane University.Google Scholar
Strier, K. B. (1992). Atelinae adaptations: behavioral strategies and ecological constraints. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 88(4), 515524.Google Scholar
Stross, B. (2008). K’U: the divine monkey. Journal of Mesoamerican Languages and Linguistics, 1(1), 134.Google Scholar
Tedlock, D. (1985). Popol Vuh: The Definitive Edition of the Mayan Book of the Dawn of Life and the Glories of Gods and Kings. New York: Simon and Schuster.Google Scholar
Thompson, J. E. S. (1970). Maya History and Religion. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
Urbani, B., & Cormier, L. A. (2015). The ethnoprimatology of the howler monkeys (Alouatta spp.): from past to present. In Kowalewski, M., Garber, P., Cortés-Ortiz, L., Urbani, B., & Youlatos, D., eds., Howler Monkeys. New York: Springer, 259280.Google Scholar
Vogt, E. Z. (1976). Tortillas for the Gods: A Symbolic Analysis of Zinacanteco Rituals. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar

References

Acevedo, N., Weber, M., García-Casco, A., Proenza, J., Sáenz, J., & Cardona, A. (2016). A first report of variscite Tairona Artifacts (A.D. 1100–1600) from the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia, and its implications for Precolumbian exchange networks in the region. Latin American Antiquity, 27(4), 549560.Google Scholar
Alcedo, A. de. (1988). Diccionario geográfico histórico de las Indias Occidentales o América (1786–1789). Caracas: Fundación de Promoción Cultural de Venezuela, Colección Viajes y Descripciones p. 11.Google Scholar
Alegría, R. E. (1996). Archaeological research in the scientific survey of Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands and its subsequent development on the island. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 776, 257264.Google Scholar
Angleria, P. M. de (1965). Décadas del Nuevo Mundo (1530). México DF: Ediciones Porrúa.Google Scholar
Antczak, A. T. (1995). Mammal bone remains from the late prehistoric Amerindian sites on Los Roques Archipelago, Venezuela: An interpretation. In Proceedings of the 16th International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology. Basse Terre, Guadeloupe: Conseil Régional de la Guadeloupe, 8399.Google Scholar
Antczak, A. T. (1999 ). Late prehistoric economy and society of the islands off the coast of Venezuela: A contextual interpretation of the non-ceramic evidence. Unpublished PhD dissertation. University College London.Google Scholar
Antczak, A. T., & Antczak, M. M. (1999). La esfera de interacción Valencioide. In Arroyo, M., Blanco, L., & Wagner, E., eds. El Arte Prehispánico de Venezuela. Caracas: Fundación Galería del Arte Nacional, 136154.Google Scholar
Antczak, A. T., Urbani, B., & Antczak, M. M. (2017a). Re-thinking the migration of Cariban-speakers from the Middle Orinoco river to North-Central Venezuela (AD 800). Journal of World Prehistory. 30(2), 131175.Google Scholar
Antczak, M. M. (2000). “Idols” in exile: Making sense of prehistoric human pottery figurines from Dos Mosquises Island, Los Roques Archipelago, Venezuela. Unpublished PhD dissertation. University College London.Google Scholar
Antczak, M. M., & Antczak, A. T. (2006). Los ídolos de las Islas Prometidas: arqueología prehispánica del Archipiélago de Los Roques. Caracas: Editorial Equinoccio.Google Scholar
Antczak, M. M., & Antczak, A. T. (2007). Los mensajes confiados a la Roca. Caracas: Editorial Equinoccio.Google Scholar
Antczak, M. M., & Antczak, A. T. (2017). Making beings: Amerindian figurines in the Caribbean. In Insoll, T., ed., The Oxford Handbook of Figurines. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 195220.Google Scholar
Antczak, M. M., Antczak, A. T., & Lentino, M. (2017b). Avian remains from late pre-colonial Amerindian sites on islands of the Venezuelan Caribbean. Environmental Archaeology, 24, 161181Google Scholar
Antczak, K. A., & Beaudry, M. (2019). Assemblages of practice. A conceptual framework for exploring human–thing relations in archaeology. Archaeological Dialogues, 26(2), 87110.Google Scholar
Arredondo, O, Varona, L. S. (1983). Sobre la validéz de Montaneia anthropomorpha Ameghino, 1910 (Primates: Cebidae). Poeyana, 255, 125.Google Scholar
Arroyo, M. G., Cruxent, J. M., & Pérez Soto de Atencio, S. (1971). Arte prehispánico de Venezuela. Caracas: Fundación Mendoza.Google Scholar
Atiles Bidó, J. G. (no date). Panorama histórico de los estudios del arte rupestre en República Dominicana. Rupestreweb. Available at: www.rupestreweb.info/panorama.htmlGoogle Scholar
Bennett, W. C. (1937). Excavations at La Mata, Maracay, Venezuela. New York: Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 36, part II.Google Scholar
Benzoni, G. (1989). Historia del Nuevo Mundo. Madrid: Alianza Editorial-Quinto Centenario.Google Scholar
Berry, E. W. (1939). Geology and palaeontology of Lake Tacarigua, Venezuela. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 81(4), 547552.Google Scholar
Bongers, H. P. (1963). Aantekeningen over de archeologie van de Indianen op Aruba. Manuscript on file, Archaeological Museum Aruba. Oranjestad: Aruba.Google Scholar
Bonvicino, C. R., Fernandes, M. E. B., & Seuánez, H. N. (1995). Morphological analysis of Alouatta seniculus species group (Primates, Cebidae). A comparison with biochemical and karyological data. Human Evolution, 10(2), 169176.Google Scholar
Boomert, A. (1983). The Saladoid occupation of Wonotobo Falls, western Suriname. Proceedings of the 9th International Congress for the Study of the Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles, Montreal. 97–120.Google Scholar
Boomert, A. (2003). Agricultural societies in the continental Caribbean. In Sued-Badillo, J., ed.General History of the Caribbean, Vol. 1 Autochtonous Societies. Paris, London and Oxford: UNESCO Publishing and Macmillan Publishers Ltd, 134194.Google Scholar
Boomert, A. (2009). Between the mainland and the islands: The Amerindian cultural geography of Trinidad. Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History, 50(1), 6373.Google Scholar
Boomert, A. (2010). Crossing the Galleons’ passage: Amerindian interaction and cultural (dis)unity between Trinidad and Tobago. Journal of Caribbean Archaeology 10, 106121.Google Scholar
Boomert, A. (2013). Gateway to the Mainland: Trinidad and Tobago. In Keegan, W. F., Hofman, C. L., & Rodríguez-Ramos, R., eds., The Oxford Handbook of Caribbean Archaeology. New York: Oxford University Press, 141154.Google Scholar
Boomert, A., Faber-Morse, B., & Rouse, I. (2013). The 1946 and 1953 Yale University Excavations in Trinidad. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Boubli, J. P., Urbani, B., & Lynch-Alfaro, J. W. (2021). Cebus leucocephalus (amended version of 2019 assessment). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2021: e.T70333164A191707856.Google Scholar
Bruner, E., & Cucina, A. (2005). Alouatta, Ateles, and the ancient Mesoamerican cultures. Journal of Anthropological Sciences, 83, 111117.Google Scholar
Buisonjé, P. H. de (1974). Neogene and Quaternary Geology of Aruba, Curaçao and Bonaire. Utrecht Uitgaven: Natuurwetenschappelijke Studiekring voor Suriname en de Nederlandse Antillen 78.Google Scholar
Carlson, L. (2005). Zooarchaeological Analysis of the 2004 Season of Excavations at the St. Catherine’s Site, Trinidad. Report prepared for the National Archaeological Committee Trinidad and Tobago.Google Scholar
Carlson, L. (2007). Cursory versus complete: Contrasting two zooarchaeology data analysis approaches at the St. Catherine’s Site (MAY-17) in Trinidad. In Basil, R., Petitjean Roget, H., & Curet, A., eds., Proceedings of the Twenty-first Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology. St. Augustine, Trinidad: University of the West Indies, 445458.Google Scholar
Ceballos-Mago, N. (2010). The Margarita Capuchin Cebus apella margaritae: A critically-endangered monkey in a fragmented habitat on Isla de Margarita, Venezuela. Unpublished PhD dissertation. University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ceballos-Mago, N. (2013). A critically-endangered capuchin (Sapajus apella margaritae) living in mountain forest fragments on Isla de Margarita, Venezuela. In Marsh, L. K., & Chapman, C. A., eds., Primates in Fragments: Complexity and Resilience. New York: Springer, 183195.Google Scholar
Ceballos-Mago, N., González, C. E., & Chivers, D. J. (2010). Impact of the pet trade on the Margarita capuchin monkey Cebus apella margaritae. Endangered Species Research, 12, 5768.Google Scholar
Civrieux, M. de (1980). Los Cumanagoto y sus vecinos. In Butt Colson, A., ed., Los aborígenes de Venezuela, vol. I. Caracas: Fundación La Salle de Ciencias Naturales, 27241.Google Scholar
Colón, C. (1984) [1502–1504]. Relación del Cuarto Viaje. In Valero, C., (comp.) Cristóbal Colón. Textos y documentos completos. Madrid: Alianza Editorial, 316330.Google Scholar
Colón, H. (1932). Historia del Almirante Don Cristóbal Colón por su hijo Don Hernando (Tomo Primero). Madrid: Librería General de Victoriano Suárez.Google Scholar
Cooke, S. B. , Mychajliw, A. M. Southon, J., & MacPhee, R. D. E. (2017). The extinction of Xenothrix mcgregori, Jamaica’s last monkey. Journal of Mammalogy, 98, 937949.Google Scholar
Cordero-Rodríguez, G. A., & Boher, S. (1988). Notes on the biology of Cebus nigrivittatus and Alouatta seniculus in northern Venezuela. Primate Conservation, 9, 6166.Google Scholar
Costa, P., Künne, M., & deBatres, L. (2015). Recent rock art studies in Eastern Mesoamerica and Lower Central America, 2005–2009. Rock Art Studies News of the World, 4, 1142.Google Scholar
Cruxent, J. M., & Rouse, I. (1958). Arqueologıía Cronológica de Venezuela, 2 vols. Caracas: Armitano Editores.Google Scholar
DaRos, M., &. Colten, R. H. (2009). A history of Caribbean archaeology at Yale University and the Peabody Museum of Natural History. The Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History, 50(1), 4962.Google Scholar
Delsol, N., & Grouard, S. (2015). Comments on Amerindian hunting practices in Trinidad (West Indies): Tetrapods from the Manzanilla site (Late Ceramic Age 300–900 AD). The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology, 11, 385410.Google Scholar
Dijkhoff, R. A. C. F. (1997). Tanki Flip/Henriquez: An early Urumaco site in Aruba. Unpublished Master’s thesis. Leiden University.Google Scholar
Dijkhoff, R. A. C. F. (2001). Salvage excavations and accidental finds in Aruba: 1996–2001. Nineteenth International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology, Aruba.Google Scholar
Dijkhoff, R. A. C. F., & Linville, M. S. (2004). Aruba, “Island of Shells.” In Dijkhoff, R. A. C. F., & Linville, M. S., eds., The Archaeology of Aruba: The Marine Shell Heritage. Oranjestad: Publication of the Archaeological Museum Aruba, 10, 18.Google Scholar
Dore, K. M. (2017). Navigating the methodological landscape: Ethnographic data expose the nuances of ‘the monkey problem’ in St Kitts, West Indies. In Dore, K. M., Riley, E. P., & Fuentes, A., eds., Ethnoprimatology: A Practical Guide to Research at the Human-Nonhuman Primate Interface. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 219231.Google Scholar
Dorst, M. C., Nieweg, D. C., Baetsen, S. (2003). Manzanilla 1 (SAN 1) An excavation of an Amerindian habitation area, September 2001. Typescript excavation report.Google Scholar
Dubelaar, C. N. (1995 ). The Petroglyphs of the Lesser Antilles, the Virgin Islands and Trinidad. Amsterdam: Natuurwetenschappelijke Studiekring voor het Caraibisch Gebied.Google Scholar
Dubelaar, C. N., Hayward-Merkling, M. H., & Cinquino-Argana, M. A. (1999). Puerto Rican Rock Art: A Resource Guide. Buffalo: Panamerican Consultants for Puerto Rico State Historic Preservation Office.Google Scholar
Dudley, R. (1899). Robert Dudley’s voyage to the West Indies, 1594–1595, narrated by Himself. In Warner, G. F. ed., The Voyage of Robert Dudley, Afterwards Styled Earl of Warwick and Leicester and Duke of Northumberland, to the West Indies, 1594–1595, Narrated by Capt. Wyatt, by Himself, and by Abram Kendall, Master. London: The Hakluyt Society, 6779.Google Scholar
Dupouy, W. (1946). La fauna de la Provincia de Venezuela según las relaciones geográficas del siglo XVI. Memoria de la Sociedad de Ciencias Naturales La Salle, 6(15), 4555.Google Scholar
DuVall, D. (2011). Rock Art Imagery of the Dominican Republic: An Introduction. Santo Domingo: Editorial Búho.Google Scholar
Du Ry, C. J. (1960). Studies on the archaeology of the Netherlands Antilles: I, Notes on the pottery of Aruba, Curaçao and Bonaire. Nieuwe West-Indische Gids/New West Indian Guide, 40(1), 81102.Google Scholar
Falci, C. G., Antczak, M. M., Antczak, A. T., & Van Gijn, A. L. (2017). Recontextualizing bodily ornaments from north-central Venezuela (AD 900–1500): The Alfredo Jahn collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin. Baessler-Archiv, 64, 87112.Google Scholar
Fewkes, J. W. (1907). The Aborigines of Porto Rico and Neighboring Islands. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office-Bureau of American Archaeology of the Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, S. M., Kaye, Q., Kappers, M., & Giovas, C. M. (2014). A decade of archaeological research on Carriacou, Grenadine Islands, West Indies. Caribbean Journal of Science, 48, 151161.Google Scholar
Ford, S. M. (1990). Platyrrhine evolution in the West Indies. Journal of Human Evolution, 19, 237254.Google Scholar
García-Arévalo, M. A. (2019). Taínos, arte y sociedad. Santo Domingo: Banco Popular Dominicano.Google Scholar
García-Casco, A., Knippenberg, S., Ramos, R. R., et al. (2013). Pre-Columbian jadeitite artifacts from the Golden Rock Site, St. Eustatius, Lesser Antilles, with special reference to jadeitite artifacts from Elliot’s, Antigua: implications for potential source regions and long-distance exchange networks in the Greater Caribbean. Journal of Archaeological Science, 40, 31533169.Google Scholar
Gassón, R. (2002). Orinoquia: The archaeology of the Orinoco basin. Journal of World Prehistory, 16, 237311.Google Scholar
Ghersi, B. M., Jia, H., Aiewsakun, P., et al. (2015). Wide distribution and ancient evolutionary history of simian foamy viruses in New World primates. Retrovirology, 12, 89.Google Scholar
Giovas, C. M. (2018). Continental connections and insular distributions: Deer bone artifacts of the precolumbian West Indies – A review and synthesis with new records. Latin American Antiquity, 29, 2743.Google Scholar
Giovas, C. M., LeFebvre, M. J., & Fitzpatrick, S. M. (2011). New records for prehistoric introduction of Neotropical mammals to the West Indies: evidence from Carriacou, Lesser Antilles. Journal of Biogeography, 20, 112.Google Scholar
Glenn, E. (1998). Population density of Cercopithecus mona on the Caribbean island of Grenada. Folia Primatologica, 69, 167171Google Scholar
Grayson, D. K. (1973). On the methodology of faunal analysis. American Antiquity, 38(4), 432439.Google Scholar
Grayson, D. K. (1978). Minimum numbers and sample size in vertebrate faunal analysis. American Antiquity, 40(1), 5365Google Scholar
Grontmij, , & Sogreah, (1968). Water and Land Resources Development Plan for the Islands of Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao. Grenoble: De Bilt.Google Scholar
Gutiérrez-Calvache, D. A., & Jaimez-Salgado, E. J. (2006). El problema del Ateles cubano. Situación actual y perspectivas. Boletín del Museo del Hombre Americano, 40, 731.Google Scholar
Gutiérrez-Calvache, D. A., & Jaimez-Salgado, E. J. (2007). Introducción a los primates fósiles de las Antillas. 120 años de paleoprimatología en el Caribe insular. Santo Domingo: Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo.Google Scholar
Harrington, M. R. (1921). Cuba before Columbus. New York: Heye Foundation-Museum of American Indians.Google Scholar
Harris, P. O. B. (1972). Notes on Trinidad Archaeology. Trinidad and Tobago Historical Society, South Section. Unpublished report, on file.Google Scholar
Harris, P. O. B. (1977). A Revised Chronological Framework for Ceramic Trinidad and Tobago. Proceedings of the 7th International Congress for the study of Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles. Caracas, Venezuela, 4757.Google Scholar
Haviser, J. B (1991). The First Bonaireans. Curaçao: Reports of the Archaeological-Anthropological Institute of the Netherlands Antilles, No.10.Google Scholar
Hayward, M. H., Atkinson, L-G., & Cinquino, M. A. (2009). Rock Art of the Caribbean. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Heekeren, H. R. van (1960). Studies on the archaeology of the Netherlands Antilles: II, A survey of the non-ceramic artifacts of Aruba, Curacao and Bonaire. Nieuwe West-Indische Gids/New West Indian Guide, 40(1), 103120.Google Scholar
Heekeren, H. R. van (1963). Studies on the Archaeology of the Netherlands Antilles: III, prehistorical research on the islands of Curaçao, Aruba and BonaireNieuwe West-Indische Gids/New West Indian Guide, 43(1), 124.Google Scholar
Herrera y Tordesillas, A. (1601). Historia general de los hechos de los castellanos en las Islas y Tierra Firme del mar Océano. Década Tercera. Madrid: Imprenta Real.Google Scholar
Hershkovitz, P. (1949). Mammals of northern Colombia. Preliminary report No. 4: Monkeys (Primates) with taxonomic revisions of some forms. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 98, 323427.Google Scholar
Holly Smith, B., Crummett, T. L., & Brandt, K. L. (1994). Ages of eruption of primate teeth: a compendium for aging individuals and comparing life histories. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 37(S19), 177231.Google Scholar
Horovitz, I., & MacPhee, R. D. E. (2012). The primate fossil record of the Greater Antilles. In Borrote-Páez, R., Woods, C. A., & Sergile, F. E., eds., Terrestrial Mammals of the West Indies. Gainesville: Florida Museum of Natural History and Wacachoota Press, 305336.Google Scholar
Humboldt, A. von (1941). Viaje a las regiones equinocciales del Nuevo Continente. Caracas: Biblioteca Venezolana de Cultura.Google Scholar
Humboldt, A. von (1956). Viaje a las regiones equinocciales del Nuevo Continente, vols. 1–5. Caracas: Biblioteca Venezolana de Cultura.Google Scholar
Jahn, A. (1927). Los Aborígenes del Occidente de Venezuela; Su Historia, Etnografía y Afinidades Lingüísticas. Caracas: Litografía y Tipografía del Comercio.Google Scholar
Jahn, A. (1932). Los cráneos deformados de los aborígenes de los Valles de Aragua. Actas y trabajos científicos del XXV Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, 1, 5968.Google Scholar
Jahn, A. (1940). Estudio sobre el Lago de Valencia. Boletín de la Academia Nacional de la Historia, 33(91).Google Scholar
Jiménez-Vásquez, O. (2011). Los monos extintos. In Borroto-Páez, R., & Mancina, C. A., eds., Mamíferos en Cuba. Vaasa: UPC Print, 4449.Google Scholar
Jiménez-Vásquez, O. (2015). Sobre la coexistencia de los aborígenes precolombinos y los primates en Cuba. Cuba Arqueológica, 8, 3340.Google Scholar
Kemp, M. E., Mychajliw, A. M., Wadman, J., & Goldberg, A. (2020). 7000 years of turnover: historical contingency and human niche construction shape the Caribbean’s Anthropocene biota. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 287, 20200447.Google Scholar
Kidder, A. (1944). Archaeology of Northwestern Venezuela. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology 26(1). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University.Google Scholar
Laffoon, J. E., Sonnemann, T. F., Antczak, M. M., & Antczak, A. T. (2016). Sourcing nonnative mammal remains from Dos Mosquises Island, Venezuela: new multiple isotope evidence. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, 10, 12651281.Google Scholar
Lehman, S. M., Sussman, R. W., Phillips-Conroy, J., & Prince, W. (2006). Ecological biogeography of primates in Guyana. In Lehman, S. M., & Fleagle, J. G., eds., Primate Biogeography. New York: Springer, pp. 105130.Google Scholar
Linares, O. (1998). Mamíferos de Venezuela. Caracas: Sociedad Conservacionista Audubon de Venezuela.Google Scholar
Linares, O. F., & White, R. S. (1980). Terrestrial fauna from Cerro Brujo (CA-3) in Bocas del Toro and La Pitahaya (IS-3) in Chriqui. In Linares, O. F., & Ranere, A. J., eds., Adaptive Radiations in Prehistoric Panama., Report 16. Peabody Museum monographs, No. 5. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University. 181193.Google Scholar
López de Gómara, F. (1979). Historia General de las Indias. Caracas: Biblioteca Ayacucho.Google Scholar
Lovén, S. (1935). Origins of the Tainan Culture, West Indies. Gothenburg: Elanders Bokfryckeri Akfiebolag.Google Scholar
Lozada-Mendieta, N., Oliver, O., & Riris, P. (2016). Archaeology in the Átures Rapids of the Middle Orinoco, Venezuela. Archaeology International, 19, 7377.Google Scholar
MacPhee, R., & Rivero de la Calle, M. (1996). Accelerator mass spectrometry 14C age determination for the alleged Cuban spider monkey, Ateles (=Montaneia) anthropomorphus. Journal of Human Evolution, 30, 8994.Google Scholar
MacPhee, R. D. E., & Flemming, C. (1999). Requiem Æternam. The last five hundred years of mammalian species extinctions. In MacPhee, R. D. E., ed., Extinctions in Near Time. Advances in Vertebrate Paleobiology, vol 2. Boston, MA: Springer, 333372.Google Scholar
MacPhee, R. D. E., & Horovitz, I. (2002). Extinct Quaternary platyrrhines of the Greater Antilles and Brazil. In Hartwig, W. C., ed., The Primate Fossil Record. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marcano, G. (1971) [1889–1891]. Etnografía Precolombina de Venezuela. Caracas: Instituto de Antropología e Historia, Universidad Central de Venezuela.Google Scholar
Martin, Lana S. (2015). Forests, gardens, and fisheries in an ancient chiefdom: Paleoethnobotany and zooarchaeology at Sitio Drago, a Late Ceramic phase village in Bocas del Toro, Panama. Unpublished PhD dissertation. University of California at Los Angeles.Google Scholar
McGuire, M. T. (1974). The St. Kitts Vervet. Basel: S. Kargel.Google Scholar
Mickleburgh, H. L. (2013). Reading the dental record. a dental anthropological approach to foodways, health and disease, and crafting in the pre-Columbian Caribbean. Published PhD dissertation. Leiden University.Google Scholar
Mittermeier, R., Rylands, A. B., & Wilson, D. E., eds., (2012). Handbook of the Mammals of the World. 3: Primates. Barcelona: Lynx.Google Scholar
Montás, O., Borrel, P. J., & Moya-Pons, F. (1983). Arte taíno. Santo Domingo: Banco Central de La República Dominicana.Google Scholar
Newsom, L. A., & Wing, E. S. (2004). On Land and Sea: Native American Use of Biological Resources in the West Indies. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Nieweg, D. C. (2003). The faunal remains from the SAN-1 site, Trinidad, Phase III, 2003. Unpublished type report for the University of the West Indies (UWI) and The Archaeological Committee of Trinidad and Tobago.Google Scholar
Nuñez-Jiménez, A. (1973). La Cueva de Matías. Estudio de sus dibujos indocubanos. In Panoš, V. ed., Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of Speleology. Paper of the Section of Spelo Archaeology. Olomouc (Czech Republic), 101–112.Google Scholar
Nuñez-Jiménez, A. (1975). Cuba: Dibujos rupestres. La Habana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales.Google Scholar
Oliver, J. R. (1989). The archaeological, linguistic and ethno-historical evidence for the expansion of Arawakan into Northwestern Venezuela and Northeastern Colombia. Unpublished PhD dissertation. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.Google Scholar
Oliver, J. R. (1997). Dabajuroid archaeology, settlements and house structures: An overview from mainland Western Venezuela. In Versteeg, A. H., & Rostain, S., eds., The Archaeology of Aruba: The Tanki Flip Site. Aruba & Amsterdam: Archaeological Museum Aruba 8/Foundation for Scientific Research in the Caribbean Region, 363428.Google Scholar
Olsen-Bogaert, H. (1981). Hacha monolítica cruciforme. Código MHD-A 000405-24-L. Época Prehispánica. Cultura Taina. Museo del Hombre Dominicano, Colecciones Arqueológicas. Inventario General (Museum file card by Harold Olsen Bogaert. August 8, 1981).Google Scholar
Osgood, C., & Howard, G. (1943). An Archaeological Survey of Venezuela. Yale University Publications in Anthropology 27. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Osgood, C. (1943). Excavations at Tocorón, Venezuela. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Ostapkowicz, J., & Newson, L. (2012). “Gods … adorned with the embroiderer’s needle”: The materials, making and meaning of a Taino cotton reliquary. Latin American Antiquity, 23, 300326.Google Scholar
Ostapkowicz, J. (2018). New wealth from the Old World: glass, jet and mirrors in the late fifteenth to early sixteenth century indigenous Caribbean. In, Brandherm, D., Heymans, E., & Hofmann, D., eds., Gifts, Goods and Money Comparing Currency and Circulation Systems in Past Societies. Oxford: Archaeopress, 154193.Google Scholar
Ostapkowicz, J. (2020). Conduits to the supernatural: Bifurcated snuff tubes in the pre-Columbian Caribbean. Journal of Caribbean Archaeology, 20, 4567.Google Scholar
Pagán-Perdomo, D. (1978). Nuevas pictografías en la Isla de Santo Domingo. Las Cuevas de Borbón. Santo Domingo: Ediciones del Museo del Hombre Dominicano.Google Scholar
Paulsen, E. (2019). Everything has its Jaguar: A narratological approach to conceptualising Caribbean Saladoid animal imagery. Unpublished PhD dissertation. Leiden University, the Netherlands.Google Scholar
Peñalver Gómez, H. (1981). Adornos y atavíos: Protectores genitales de los pobladores precolombinos que habitaron la cuenca del Lago de Valencia, Venezuela. Maracay: Grafindustrial.Google Scholar
Peñalver, J. (1969). Deformaciones maxilo dento facial en los indios de la cuenca del Lago Tacarigua. Valencia: Instituto de Antropología del Estado Carabobo.Google Scholar
Pérez de Barradas, J. (1941). El arte rupestre en Colombia. Madrid: Instituto Bernardino de Sahagún, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas.Google Scholar
Pérez-Orozco, L. (1982). Hallazgos arqueológicos en el sistema de Bellamar. Boletín del Grupo Espeleológicos Norbert Casteret, 3, 14.Google Scholar
Phillips, K. A., & Jack, K. M. (2016). Trinidad white-fronted capuchin. In Rowe, N., & Myers, M.. eds., All the World’s Primates. Charlestown: Pogonas Press, 216217.Google Scholar
Plens, C. R. (2010). Animals for humans in life and death. Revista do Museu de Arqueologia e Etnologia, 20, 3152.Google Scholar
Poey, A. (1855a). Arqueología americana. Memoria presentada por D. Andrés Poey a la Sociedad Arqueológica Americana sobre “Antigüedades Cubanas” (1). Revista de La Habana, periódico quincenal, de ciencias, literatura, artes, modas, teatros, & con litografías y grabados, 4, 1213.Google Scholar
Poey, A. (1855b). Arqueología americana. Memoria presentada por D. Andrés Poey a la Sociedad Arqueológica Americana sobre “Antigüedades Cubanas” (2) (continuación). Revista de La Habana, periódico quincenal, de ciencias, literatura, artes, modas, teatros, & con litografías y grabados, 4, 2527.Google Scholar
Raguet-Schofield, M., & Pavé, R. (2014). An ontogenetic framework for alouatta: infant development and evaluating models of life history. In Kowalewski, M. M., Garber, P. A., Cortés-Ortiz, L., Urbani, B., & Youlatos, D., eds., Howler Monkeys: Adaptive Radiation, Systematics, and Morphology. New York: Springer, 289316.Google Scholar
Requena, R. (1932). Vestigios de la Atlántida. Caracas: Tipografía Americana.Google Scholar
Rimoli, R. O. (2010). Presencia de monos entre los taínos. La Voz del Pueblo Taíno, 2, 3.Google Scholar
Rivera-Pérez, J. I., Cano, R. J., Narganes-Storde, Y., Chanlatte-Baik, L., & Toranzos, G. A. (2015). Retroviral DNA sequences as a means for determining ancient diets. PLoS ONE, 10, e0144951.Google Scholar
Rivero de la Calle, M., & Borroto-Páez, R. (2012). Land mammals in indigenous art in the West Indies. In Borrote-Páez, R., Woods, C. A., & Sergile, F. E., eds., Terrestrial Mammals of the West Indies. Gainesville: Florida Museum of Natural History and Wacachoota Press, 363368.Google Scholar
Rojas, A., & Thanyi, L. (1992). Arte rupestre del Municipio Vargas. La Guaira: Fondo Editorial El Tarmeño.Google Scholar
Rouse, I. (1947). Prehistory of Trinidad in relation to adjacent areas. Man 103, 9398.Google Scholar
Rouse, I. (1953). Indian sites in Trinidad. In Bullbrook, J. A. ed., On the Excavation of a Shell Mound at Palo Seco, Trinidad, B.W.I. New Haven: Yale University Press, 94111.Google Scholar
Rouse, I., & Cruxent, J. M. (1963). Arqueología Venezolana. Caracas: Tipografía Vegas.Google Scholar
Ruiz Blanco, P. M. (1965). Conversión de Píritu. Caracas: Academia Nacional de la Historia. Fuentes para la Historia Colonial de Venezuela 78.Google Scholar
Sade, D. S., & Hildrech, R. W. (1965). Notes of the green monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops sabeus) on St. Kitts, West Indies. Caribbean Journal of Science, 5, 6779.Google Scholar
Sague-Machiran, M. A. (2008). The Ceremonial Taino petaloid hatchet and its relation to the Maya hatchet god Kawil. Available at: https://indigenouscaribbean.ning.com/profiles/blogs/p-styletextalign-leftimg?overrideMobileRedirect=1Google Scholar
Sanoja, M. (1979). Las Culturas Formativas del Oriente de Venezuela. La Tradición Barrancas del Bajo Orinoco. Vol. 6. Caracas: Biblioteca de la Academia Nacional de la Historia.Google Scholar
Sanoja, M. (1969). La Fase Zancudo. Investigaciones Arqueológicas en el Lago de Maracaibo. Caracas: Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas y Sociales, Universidad Central de Venezuela.Google Scholar
Sanoja, M. (1970). Análisis zooarqueológico de los restos de una fauna excavados en el sitio Caño Grande, Distrito Colón, Estado Zulia. Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales de la UCV, 3, 2125.Google Scholar
Santos, A. F., Cavalcante, L. T., Muniz, C. P., Switzer, W., & Soares, M. A. (2019). Simian foamy viruses in Central and South America: A New World of discovery. Viruses, 11, 967.Google Scholar
Silva-Talboda, G., Suárez-Duque, W., & Díaz-Franco, S. (2007). Compendio de los mamíferos terrestres autóctonos de Cuba, vivientes y extinguidos. La Habana: Museo Nacional de Historia Natural.Google Scholar
Simón, Fray P. (1963). Noticias Historiales de Venezuela. Tomo II. Caracas: Academia Nacional de la Historia. Fuentes para la Historia Colonial de Venezuela 67.Google Scholar
Steadman, D. W., & Stokes, A. V. (2002). Changing exploitation of terrestrial vertebrates during the past 3000 years on Tobago, West Indies. Human Ecology, 30, 339367.Google Scholar
Steinen, K. von den (1904). Ausgrabungen am Valenciasee. Globus, 86(7), 101108.Google Scholar
Sterks, W. B. J. (1982). Het Archeologisch Aardewerk van Aruba, Curaçao en Bonaire met als Uitgangspunt de Van Heekeren Collectie. Unpublished Master’s thesis. Utrecht University.Google Scholar
Sýkora, A. (2006). Manejo de Recursos Faunísticos por los Pobladores del Sitio Prehispánico en Palmasola, Estado Carabobo, Venezuela. Unpublished Master’s thesis. Central University of Venezuela.Google Scholar
Tacoma, J., & Versteeg, A. H. (1990). Skeletmateriaal van de Sites Budui, Malmok, en Canashitu-5 op Aruba. Intern Rapport Archeologisch Museum Aruba no. 7.Google Scholar
Trevisan, A. (1989). Libretto de tutta la nauigationes de Re de Spagna de le isole et terreni nuouamente trouati. In Vannini de Gerulewicz, M., ed., El Mar de los Descubridores. Caracas: Fundación de Promoción Cultural de Venezuela (Colección Viajes y Descripciones, 111158.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (1999). Nuevo mundo, nuevos monos: sobre primates neotropicales en los siglos XV y XVI. Neotropical Primates, 7(4), 121125.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2003). Utilización del estrato vertical por el mono aullador de manto (Alouatta palliata, Primates) en Isla Colón, Panamá. Antropo, 4, 2933.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2004). Further information on Neotropical monkeys reported in the XVI century. Neotropical Primates, 12(3), 146147.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2005). The targeted monkey: a re-evaluation of predation on New World primates. Journal of Anthropological Sciences, 83, 89109.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2011). Further information on Neotropical monkeys reported in the XVI century, Part 3. Neotropical Primates, 18, 6264.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2015). Historia de la primatología en Venezuela, Parte 1: Siglos XV y XVI. Memoria de la Fundación La Salle de Ciencias Naturales, 175 –176, 125146.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2016a). Nonhuman Primate Samples from the National Archaeological Museum of Aruba, Final Report – Zooarchaeological Collection. Manuscript on file, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Caracas, Venezuela.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2016b). De gatos monillos, bogios y otras simias americanas: Los primates neotropicales en la crónica hispano-lusa del siglo XVI. Anartia, 26, 71135.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2019). Primates in the Caribbean: Monkeys’ Histoire in a 16th-century French manuscript. Journal of the National Museum (Prague), Natural History Series, 188, 8188.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2021). Archaeoprimatology, the longue durée interface between humans and nonhuman primates. Annual Review of Anthropology, 50, 379401.Google Scholar
Urbani, B., & Gil, E. (2001). Consideraciones sobre restos de primates de un yacimiento arqueológico del oriente de Venezuela (América del Sur): Cueva del Guácharo, estado Monagas. Munibe Antropologia-Arkeologia, 53, 135142.Google Scholar
Urbani, B., & Cormier, L. A. (2015). The ethnoprimatology of the Howler Monkeys (Alouatta spp.): From past to present. In Kowalewski, M. M., Garber, P. A., Cortés-Ortiz, L., Urbani, B., & Youlatos, D., eds., Howler Monkeys: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation. Springer, New York, 259280.Google Scholar
Urbani, B., Portillo-Quintero, C. (2018). Consideraciones sobre la distribución y estado de conservación de los primates de la Guayana venezolana. In Urbani, B., Kowalewski, M. M., Grassetto Texeira da Silva, R., de la Torre, S., & Cortés-Ortiz, L., eds., La primatología en Latinoamérica 2 / A primatologia na America Latina 2. Tomo II. Costa Rica-Venezuela. Ediciones IVIC, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, Caracas, 677689.Google Scholar
Urbani, B., & Rodríguez, J. (2021). Pre-Hispanic howler monkeys from two sites of northern Venezuela and the Orinocan connection: An archaeoprimatological study. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 31, 325338.Google Scholar
Valadez, R. (2014). Monos y jaguares en el universo prehispánico. In Sandoval-Hoffmann, A., Sandoval-Martínez, A., & Saínz, L. I., eds., Los artistas responsables en defensa de la fauna. Mexico: Vínculos, Comunidad y Cultura A.C., 296321.Google Scholar
Valencia, R. de, & Sujo-Volsky, J. (1987). El diseño de los petroglifos venezolanos. Caracas: Fundación Pampero.Google Scholar
Vargas-Arenas, I. (1978). Puerto Santo: Un nuevo sitio arqueológico de la costa oriental de Venezuela. Actes du Septieme Congres International d’Etudes des Civilisations Precolombiennes des Petites Antilles, 211–229.Google Scholar
Vargas-Arenas, I. (1979). La Tradición Saladoide del Oriente de Venezuela. La Fase Cuartel. Caracas: Academia Nacional de la Historia.Google Scholar
Versteeg, A. H. (1990). Resultaten Voorlopig Onderzoek van het Budui terrein. Intern Rapport Archeologisch Museum Aruba 6. Oranjestad: Aruba.Google Scholar
Versteeg, A. H. (1997). Pre-Columbian houses at the Santa Cruz site. In Alofs, L., Rutgers, W., & Coomans, H. E. eds., Arubaans Akkoord, Opstellen over Aruba van voor de komst van de olieindustrie. Stichting Libri Antilliani, Kabinet van de Gevolmachtigde Minister van Aruba, Bloemendaal, 89101.Google Scholar
Pusch, B. von (1941). Die Arten der Gattung Cebus. Zeitschrift für Säugetiere, 16, 183237.Google Scholar
Wagenaar-Hummelinck, P. (1991). De Rotstekeningen van Aruba. Utrecht: Uitgeverij Presse-Papier.Google Scholar
Wagenaar-Hummelinck, P. (1992). De Rotstekeningen van Bonaire en Curaçao. Utrecht: Uitgeverij Presse-Papier.Google Scholar
Wake, T. A. (2006). Prehistoric exploitation of the swamp palm (Raphia taedigera: Arecacae) at Sitio Drago, Isla Colón, Bocas del Toro, Panamá. The Caribbean Journal of Science, 42, 1119.Google Scholar
Wake, T. A. (no date). A Pre-European archaeology of Greater Bocas del Toro, Western Caribbean. In Dennett, C., & Lyall, V., eds., El Mar Caribe: The American Mediterranean. Denver: Denver Art Museum.Google Scholar
Wake, T. A., De Leon, J., & Fitzgerald, C. (2004). Prehistoric Sitio Drago, Bocas del Toro, Panamá. Antiquity Project Gallery 78 (300). Available at: www.antiquity.ac.uk/projgall/wake300/Google Scholar
Wake, T. A., Doughty, D. R., & Kay, M. (2013). Archaeological investigations provide Late Holocene baseline ecological data for Bocas del Toro, Panama. Bulletin of Marine Science, 89(4), 10151035.Google Scholar
Wake, T. A., & Martin, L. S. (2016). Proyecto Arqueológico Sitio Drago: Sociedad y Subsistencia Prehistórica en el Caribe Noroccidental de Panamá: Comprendiendo el Comportamiento Ritual Pasado, Fase 2: Pruebas Adicionales en el Sitio Drago (BT-IC-1), Isla Colón, Bocas del Toro, Panamá. Report on file, Departamento Nacional de Patrimonio Histórico, Instituto Nacional de Cultura, Panamá.Google Scholar
Wake, T. A., Martin, L. S., & Mendizábal, T. E. (2021). Sitio Drago (Isla Colón, Bocas del Toro, Panamá): Un Aldea y Centro de Intercambio en el Caribe Panameño. In Martín, J.-G., Mendizábal, T. E., & Cooke, R. G., eds., Más que un puente terrestre: Nuevos datos sobre la vida aldeana en Panamá. Panamá: Editora Novo Art.Google Scholar
Wake, T. A., Mojica, A. O., Davis, M. H., Campbell, Ch. J., & Mendizábal, T. E. (2012). Electrical resistivity surveying and pseudo three-dimensional tomographic imaging at Sitio Drago, Bocas del Toro, Panama. Archaeological Prospection, 9(1), 4958.Google Scholar
Waldron, L. (2011). Geographic distributions of zoomorphic motifs in Saladoid ceramics. Actes du 24e Congress de l’AIAC. Martinique. 450–466.Google Scholar
Waldron, L. (2009). Whiskers, claws and prehensile tails: Land mammals’ imagery in Saladoid ceramics. Proceedings of the 23rd Congress of the International Association of Caribbean Archaeology, Antigua. Unpublished presentation.Google Scholar
Waldron, L. (2016). Handbook of Ceramic Animal Symbols in the Ancient Lesser Antilles. Gainesville University of Florida, Florida Museum of Natural History: Ripley Bullen Series.Google Scholar
Wauben, N. (2018). Expressive and performative material culture: investigating the social roles of ceramic adornos from the Site of El Flaco (13th–15th century) in the Northwestern Dominican Republic. Unpublished RMA thesis. Leiden University.Google Scholar
Werbata, J. (1913). Topografische kaart van Aruba. [triangulation J. J. Beaujon, R. J. Beaujon en L. Lens, 1904–1909, terrain surveying W. A. Jonckheer 1909–1911]. The Hague: Lith J. Smulders & Co.Google Scholar
Wilson, D. E., & Reeder, D. M., eds., (2005). Mammal species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Vol. 1. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Wing, E. (1962). Succession of mammalian faunas on Trinidad, West Indies. PhD dissertation. University of Florida, USA.Google Scholar
Wing, E. (2012). Zooarchaeology of West Indian land mammals. In Borrote-Páez, R., Woods, C. A., & Sergile, F. E., eds., Terrestrial Mammals of the West Indies. Gainesville: Florida Museum of Natural History and Wacachoota Press, 341356.Google Scholar
Zucchi, A. (1999). El Alto Orinoco. In Arroyo, M., Blanco, L., & Wagner, E., eds., El arte prehispánico de Venezuela. Caracas: Fundación Galería del Arte Nacional, 2233.Google Scholar

References

Albuja, L., & Arcos, R.. (2007). Evaluación de las poblaciones de Cebus albifrons cf. aequatorialis en los Bosques Suroccidentales Ecuatorianos. Politécnica, 27(4) Biología, 7, 5867.Google Scholar
Allen, C. (2012). Foxboy: Intimacy and Aesthetics in Andean Stories. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Alva, I. (2013). Ventarrón y Collud. Origen y auge de la civilización en la costa norte del Perú. Lima: Ministerio de Cultura and Proyecto Naylamp.Google Scholar
Aquino, R., Charpentier, E., García, G., Arévalo, I., & López, L. (2014). Reconocimiento de primates y amenazas para su supervivencia en bosques pre- montano y montano de la Región Cajamarca, Perú. Neotropical Primates, 21(2), 171176.Google Scholar
Aquino, R., García, G., Charpentier, E., & López, L. (2017). Estado de conservación de Lagothrix flavicauda y otros primates en bosques montanos de San Martín y Huánuco, Perú. Revista Peruana de Biología, 24(1), 2534.Google Scholar
Baker, M. (1992). Capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus) and the ancient Maya. Ancient Mesoamerica, 3(2), 219228.Google Scholar
Bennett, W. (1939). Archaeology of the North Coast of Peru. An Account of Exploration and Excavation in Viru and Lambayeque Valleys. New York: American Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Brack, A. (1986). Las ecorregiones del Perú. Boletín de Lima, 44, 5770.Google Scholar
Bussmann, R., & Sharon, D. (2009). Naming a phantom – The quest to find the identity of Ulluchu, an unidentified ceremonial plant of the Moche culture in Northern Peru. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 5, 8.Google Scholar
Carrión Cachot, R. (2005). El culto al agua en el Antiguo Perú. Lima: Instituto Nacional de Cultura.Google Scholar
Casanova, J. (1990). El mito de los ancestros Secoya. Origen de los humanos y los monos. Amazonia Peruana, 19, 8998.Google Scholar
De Bock, E. (2012). Sacrificios humanos para el orden cósmico y la regeneración. Estructura y significado en la iconografía Moche. Trujillo: Ediciones Sian.Google Scholar
Delavaud, C. (1984). Las regiones costeñas del Perú septentrional. Lima: Centro de Investigación y Promoción del Campesinado and Pontifícia Universidad Católica del Perú.Google Scholar
Descola, P. (2005). Beyond Nature and Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Donnan, C., & Mackey, C. (1978). Ancient Burial Patterns of the Moche Valley, Perú. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Duviols, P. (1983). ElContra Idolatriam de Luis de Teruel y una versión primeriza del mito de Pachacámac-Vichama. Revista Andina, 1(2), 385392.Google Scholar
Eeckhout, P. (2002). Hallazgo y desenfardelamiento de un bulto funerario de Pachacamac. In Solanilla, V., ed. Actas de las II Jornadas Internacionales sobre textiles precolombinos. Barcelona: Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Departament d’Art, 135152.Google Scholar
Eeckhout, P. (2004). Relatos míticos y prácticas rituales en Pachacamac. Boletín IFEA, 33(1), 154.Google Scholar
Fausto, C. (2000). Of enemies and pets: Warfare and shamanism in Amazonia. American Ethnologist, 26(4), 933956.Google Scholar
Fausto, C. (2012). Too many owners: Mastery and ownership in Amazonia. In Brightman, M., Grotti, V., & Ulturgasheva, O., eds., Animism in Rainforest and Tundra: Personhood, Animals, Plants and Things in Contemporary Amazonia and Siberia. Oxford: Berghahn, 2947.Google Scholar
Fragaszy, D., Visalberghi, E., & Fedigan, L. (2004). The Complete Capuchin: The Biology of the Genus Cebus. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gamboa, J. (2020). Un personaje elusivo: Los monos en el estilo cerámico Casma de la costa norcentral de Perú (ca. 800–1350 dC). Chungará, 52(2), 285-303.Google Scholar
Gareis, I. (1994). Una bucólica andina: curanderos y brujos en la costa norte del Perú (siglo XVIII). In Millones, L., & Lemlij, M., eds. En el nombre del señor. Shamanes, demonios y curanderos del norte del Perú. Lima: Seminario Interdisciplinario de Estudios Andinos, 211230.Google Scholar
Goepfert, N. (2012). New zooarcheological and funerary perspectives on Mochica culture (100-800 AD), Peru. Journal of Field Archaeology, 37(2), 104120.Google Scholar
Guengerich, A., & Church, W. (2017). Una mirada hacia el futuro: Nuevas direcciones en la arqueología de los Andes Nororientales. Boletín de Arqueología PUCP, 23, 313334.Google Scholar
Guffroy, J. (1992). Las tradiciones culturales formativas en el Alto Piura, In Bonavia, D., ed. Estudios de Arqueología Peruana. Lima: FOMCIENCIAS, 99122.Google Scholar
Haraway, D. (2008). When Species Meet. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Harris, O. (2000). To Make the Earth Bear Fruit: Ethnographic Essays on Fertility, Work and Gender in Highland Bolivia. London: University of London, Institute of Latin American Studies.Google Scholar
Hocquenghem, A. M. (1991). Frontera entre ‘Áreas culturales’ nor y centroandinas en los valles y la costa del extremo norte peruano. Boletín IFEA, 20(2), 309348.Google Scholar
Hocquenghem, A. M. (1993). Rutas de entrada del Mullu en el Extremo Norte del Perú. Boletín IFEA, 22(3), 701719.Google Scholar
Hocquenghem, A. M. (2001). Una historia del bosque seco. Debate Agrario, 33, 3960.Google Scholar
Hurtado, C., Serrano-Villavicencio, J., & Pacheco, V. (2016). Population density and primate conservation in the Noroeste Biosphere Reserve, Tumbes, Peru. Revista Peruana de Biología, 23(2), 151158.Google Scholar
Jack, K., & Campos, F. (2012). Distribution, abundance, and spatial ecology of the critically endangered Ecuadorian capuchin (Cebus albifrons aequatorialis). Tropical Conservation Science, 5(2), 173191.Google Scholar
Jackson, M. (2004). Chimú sculptures of Huacas Tacaynamo and the Dragon. Latin American Antiquity, 15(3), 298322.Google Scholar
Joyce, T. (1922). The “paccha” of ancient Peru. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 52(1), 141149.Google Scholar
Karadimas, D. (2016). Monkeys, Wasps and Gods: Graphic perspectives on Middle Horizon and later pre-Hispanic painted funerary textiles from the Peruvian coast. Nuevo Mundo. Nuevos Mundos. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4000/nuevomundo.69281Google Scholar
Kaulicke, P. (1998). El periodo Formativo de Piura. Boletín de Arqueología PUCP, 2, 1936.Google Scholar
Kirksey, S. E., & Helmreich, S. (2010). The emergence of multispecies ethnography. Cultural Anthropology, 25(4), 545576.Google Scholar
Leo, M. (1989). Biología y conservación del mono choro de cola amarilla (Lagothrix flavicauda), especie en peligro de extinción. In Saavedra, C., Mittermeier, R., & Santos, I., eds. La Primatologia en Latinoamérica. Washington, DC: World Wildlife Fundation, 2330.Google Scholar
Levine, A. (2011). A case for local ceramic production in the Jequetepeque Valley during the Late Horizon. In Zori, C., & Johnson, I., eds., From State to Empire in the Prehistoric Jequetepeque Valley, Peru. Oxford: BAR Publishing, 169177.Google Scholar
Mackey, C. (2003). La transformación socioeconómica de Farfán bajo el gobierno Inka. Boletín de Arqueología PUCP, 7, 321353.Google Scholar
Mackey, C., & Nelson, A. (2020). Life, Death and Burial Practices during the Inca Occupation of Farfán on Peru’s North Coast. Andean Past Special Publications, 6. Available at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/andean_past_special/6Google Scholar
Makowski, K. (2001). Ritual y narración en la iconografía mochica. Arqueológicas, 25, 175203.Google Scholar
Manchay, J., & Ramírez, S. (2014). Registro de dos poblaciones de «mono aullador» Alouatta seniculus (Linnaeus, 1766) en la provincia de Huancabamba, región Piura, Perú. Revista Biodiversidad Neotropical, 4(1), 4954.Google Scholar
Martínez, M. C. (1986). Temas iconográficos de la cerámica Chimú. Revista Española de Antropología Americana, 16, 137152.Google Scholar
McEwan, C., & Delgado, F. (2008). Late Pre-Hispanic polities of coastal Ecuador. In Silverman, H., & Isbell, W., eds., Handbook of South American Archaeology. New York: Springer, 505525.Google Scholar
Moore, J. (1989). Pre-Hispanic beer in Coastal Peru: Technology and social context of prehistoric production. American Anthropologist, 91(3), 682695.Google Scholar
Moore, J. (2008). El Periodo Intermedio Tardío en el Departamento de Tumbes. Revista del Museo de Arqueología de la Universidad Nacional de Trujillo, 10, 155175.Google Scholar
Narváez, A. (2014a). Dioses de Lambayeque. Introducción al estudio de la mitología tardía de la north coast de Perú. Chiclayo: Ministerio de Cultura and Proyecto Naylamp.Google Scholar
Narváez, A. (2014b). Dioses, encantos y gentiles. Introducción al estudio de la tradición oral Lambayecana. Chiclayo: Ministerio de Cultura and Museo Túcume.Google Scholar
Netherly, P. (1990). Out of many: The organization of rule in the north coast polities. In Moseley, M., & Cordy-Collins, A., eds., The Northern Dynasties: Kingship and Statecraft in Chimor. Washington DC: Dumbarton Oaks, 461485.Google Scholar
Pozzi-Escot, D., & Uceda, C. (2015). Museo Pachacamac. Lima: Ministerio de Cultura.Google Scholar
Pulgar Vidal, J. (1989). Análisis geográfico de la Región Nororiental del Marañón. Lima: Instituto Nacional de Fomento Municipal.Google Scholar
Ramirez, S. (2005). To Feed and Be Fed: The Cosmological Bases of Authority and Identity in the Andes. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Reitz, E. (2003). Resource use through time at Paloma, Peru. Bulletin of Florida Museum of Natural History, 440, 6580.Google Scholar
Rice, P., & South, K. (2015). Revisiting monkeys on pots: A contextual consideration of primate imagery on Classic Lowland Maya pottery. Ancient Mesoamerica, 26, 275294.Google Scholar
Rojas, C., & Mejía, J. (2013). Plataformas funerarias menores oeste del núcleo urbano Moche. In Uceda, S., & Morales, R., eds., Proyecto Arqueológico Huaca de la Luna. Informe Técnico 2012. Universidad Nacional de Trujillo, 363422.Google Scholar
Rosenberger, A., Halenar, L., Cooke, S., & Hartwig, W. (2010). Morphology and evolution of the spider monkey, genus Ateles. In Campbell, C., ed., Spider Monkey: The Biology, Behavior and Ecology of the Genus Ateles. Cambridge University Press, 1949.Google Scholar
Rossi, P. (1999). Cuando los amantes se transforman en tunches: Sexo y moral en las sociedades nativas en transformación. Amazonia Peruana, 13(26), 211254.Google Scholar
Rostworowski, M. (1975). Algunos comentarios hechos a las ordenanzas del Doctor Cuenca. Historia y Cultura, 9, 119154.Google Scholar
Rostworowski, M. (1976). El señorío de Changuco. Boletín IFEA, 5(1–2), 97147.Google Scholar
Schaedel, R. (1988). La etnografía muchik en las fotografías de H. Brüning 1886–1925. Lima: Ediciones COFIDE.Google Scholar
Servais, V. (2018). Anthropomorphism in human-animal interactions: A pragmatic view. Frontiers in Psycholog, 9, 110.Google Scholar
Shady, S. (2011). Sociedades Formativas de Bagua-Jaén y sus relaciones andinas y amazónicas. In Lederberger, P., ed., Formativo Sudamericano. Una reevaluación. Quito: Abya-Yala, 201211.Google Scholar
Shady, R., & Leyva, C. (2003). La ciudad sagrada de Caral-Supe. Lima: Instituto Nacional de Cultura.Google Scholar
Shimada, I. (1995). Cultura Sicán. Dios, riqueza y poder en la costa norte del Perú. Lima: Banco Continental y Edubanco.Google Scholar
[Tomás, ?] (2008 [1608]). Ritos y Tradiciones de Huarochirí. Taylor, G.,ed., Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, IFEA y UNMSM.Google Scholar
Topic, J. (1977). The lower class at Chan Chan. A qualitative approach. PhD thesis. Harvard University.Google Scholar
Trever, L., & Pillsbury, J. (2011). Martínez de Compañón and his illustrated ‘Museum’. In Bleichmar, D., & Mancall, P., eds., Collecting Across Cultures: Material Exchanges in the Early Modern Atlantic World. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 236253.Google Scholar
Tufinio, M. (2006). Excavaciones en el Frontis North y Plaza 1 de Huaca de la Luna. In Uceda, S., & Morales, R., eds., Proyecto Arqueológico Huaca de la Luna. Informe Técnico 2005. Universidad Nacional de Trujillo, 4177.Google Scholar
Tufinio, M. (2013). Excavaciones en Fachada Norte y Plaza 1: Resultados de la temporada 2004. In Uceda, S., Mujica, E., & Morales, R., eds., Investigaciones en la Huaca de la Luna 2004. Trujillo: Proyecto Huacas del Sol y de la Luna, 5790.Google Scholar
Uceda, S. (1997). Esculturas en miniatura y una maqueta en madera. In Uceda, S., Mujica, E., & Morales, R., eds., Investigaciones en Huaca de La Luna 1995. Universidad Nacional de Trujillo, 151176.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2014). De gatos monillos, bogios y otras simias americanas: Los primates neotropicales en la crónica hispano-lusa del siglo XVI. Anartia, 26, 71135.Google Scholar
Urton, G. (1985). Animal metaphors and the life cycle in an Andean community. In Urton, G., ed., Animal Myths and Metaphors in South America. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 251284.Google Scholar
Valadez, R. (2014). Monos y jaguares en la cosmovisión prehispánica. In Sandoval, A., & Sáinz, L., eds., Los artistas responsables en defensa de la fauna. México DF: Grupo Turín SA, 289313.Google Scholar
Valcárcel, L. (1946). Cusco archaeology. In Steward, J., ed., Handbook of South American Indians. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 177182.Google Scholar
Van Dooren, T., Kirksey, S. E., & Münster, U. (2016). Multispecies studies. Cultivating arts of attentiveness. Environmental Humanities, 8(1), 123.Google Scholar
Van Valkenburgh, P., Kelloway, S., Dussubieux, L., Quilter, J., & Glascock, M. (2015). The production and circulation of indigenous lead-glazed ceramics in northern Peru during Spanish colonial times. Journal of Archaeological Science, 61, 172185.Google Scholar
Veracini, C., & Martins-Teixeira, D. (2017). Perception and description of New World nonhuman primates in the travel literature of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries: A critical review. Annals of Science, 74(1), 2563.Google Scholar
Vílchez, C. (2015). El camino Inca de la costa en el Parque Nacional Cerros de Amotape, Tumbes. Lima: Ministerio de Cultura.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, E. (1992). From the Enemy’s Point of View: Humanity and Divinity in an Amazonian Society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, E. (1998). Cosmological deixis and Amerindian perspectivism. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 4(3), 469488.Google Scholar
Wester, C. (2016). Chornancap. Palacio de una gobernante y sacerdotisa de la cultura Lambayeque. Chiclayo: Ministerio de Cultura.Google Scholar
Wołoszyn, J. (2014). Wróg – Inny – Sąsiad. Obraz obcego w kulturze Moche. (Enemies – Strangers – Neighbours. Image of the Others in Moche Culture). Warsaw: Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego.Google Scholar
Wright, K., Wright, B., Ford, S., et al. (2015). The effects of ecology and evolutionary history on robust capuchin morphological diversity. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 82, 455466.Google Scholar
Zevallos, J. (1994). La crónica de Ocxaguaman. Trujillo: Fundación Alfredo Pinillos.Google Scholar
Zuidema, T. (1983). The lion in the city. Royal symbols of transition in Cuzco. Journal of Latin American Lore, 9(1), 39100.Google Scholar

References

Alaica, A. K. (2018). Partial and complete deposits and depictions: Social Zooarchaeology, iconography and the role of animals in Late Moche Peru. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 20, 864872.Google Scholar
Alva, I. (2013). Ventarrón y Collud. Origen y Auge de la Civilización en la Costa Norte del Perú. Lima: Ministerio de Cultural del Perú, Proyecto Especial Naylamp Lambayeque.Google Scholar
Bawden, G. (1996). The Moche. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Benson, E. P. (1985). The Moche moon. In Peter Kvietok, D., & Sandweiss, D. H., eds., Recent Studies in Andean Prehistory and Protohistory. Ithaca: Latin American Studies Program, Cornell University, 105144.Google Scholar
Benson, E. P. (1997). Birds and Beasts of Ancient Latin America. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.Google Scholar
Benson, E. P. (2012). The Worlds of the Moche on the North Coast of Peru. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Bergeson, D. (1996). The positional behavior and prehensile tail use of Alouatta palliata, Ateles geoffroyi, and Cebus capucinus. Unpublished PhD thesis, Washington University.Google Scholar
Barrera Vásquez, A. (1991). Diccionario Maya, 2nd ed. Mexico City: Editorial Porrúa.Google Scholar
Billman, B. R. (2002). Irrigation and the origins of the Southern Moche state on the north coast of Peru. Latin American Antiquity, 13(4), 371400.Google Scholar
Bourget, S. (1994). Los Sacerdotes a la Sombra del Cerro Blanco y del Arco Bicéfalo. In Revista del Museo de Arqueología, Antropología e Historia No. 5, Trujillo: Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional de Trujillo, 81125.Google Scholar
Bourget, S. (2001a). Rituals of sacrifice: Its practice at Huaca de la Luna and its representations. In Pillsbury, J.,ed., Moche Art and Archaeology in Ancient Peru. New York: Yale University Press, 89110.Google Scholar
Bourget, S. (2001b). Children and ancestors: Ritual practices at the Moche Site of Huaca de la Luna, North Coast of Peru. In Benson, P., & Cook, A. G., eds., Ritual Sacrifice in Ancient Peru. Austin: University of Texas Press, 93118.Google Scholar
Bourget, S. (2006). Sex, Death and Sacrifice in Moche Religion and Visual Culture. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Bryant, J. E., Holmes, E. C., & Barrett, A. D. T. (2007). Out of Africa. A molecular perspective on the introduction of yellow fever virus into the Americas. PLoS Pathogens, 3(5), 375.Google Scholar
Burger, R. L. (1992). Chavin and the Origins of Andean Civilization. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Bussmann, R. W., & Sharon, D. (2006). Traditional medicinal plant use in Northern Peru: Tracking two thousand years of healing culture. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 2(47), 118.Google Scholar
Bussmann, R. W., & Sharon, D. (2009). Naming a phantom — the quest to find the identity of the Ulluchu, an unidentified ceremonial Plant of the Moche culture in Northern Peru. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 5(8), 16.Google Scholar
Cant, J. (1986). Locomotion and feeding postures of spider and howling monkey: Field study and evolutionary interpretation. Folia Primatologica, 46, 114.Google Scholar
Carpio Perla, M., & Delibes Mateos, R. (2004). La Cámara Funeraria M-U1242 del Área 34. Castillo Butters, L. J., ed., Programa Arqueológico San José de Moro, Temporada de 2004. Lima: Pontificia Universidad Católico del Perú, 126139.Google Scholar
Castillo, L. J. (2001). The Last of the Mochicas: A view from the Jequetepeque Valley. In Moche Art and Archaeology in Ancient Peru, Pillsbury, J., ed., New Haven: Yale University Press, 307328.Google Scholar
Castillo, L. J. (2010). Moche politics in the Jequetepeque Valley: A case for political opportunism. In Quilter, J., & Castillo, L. J., eds., New Perspectives on Moche Political Organization. Washington DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research and Collection, 83109.Google Scholar
Castillo, L. J., & Homquist, U. (2000). Mujeres y Poder en la Sociedad Mochica Tardia. In Henriquez, N., ed., El Hechizo de las Imágenes: Estatus Social, Género y Etnicidad en la Historia Peruana. Lima: Fondo Editorial de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 1334.Google Scholar
Castillo, L. J., & Quilter, J. (2010). An overview of past and current theories and research on Moche political organization. In Quilter, J., & Castillo, L. J., eds., New Perspectives on Moche Political Organization. Washington DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research and Collection, 116.Google Scholar
Cordy-Collins, A. (2001). Blood and the moon priestesses: Spondylus shell in Moche ceremony. In Benson, E. P., & Cook, A. G., eds., Ritual Sacrifice in Ancient Peru. Austin: University of Texas Press, 3554.Google Scholar
DeMarrais, E., & Robb, J. (2013). Art makes society: An introductory visual essay. World Art, 3(1), 322.Google Scholar
DeMarrais, E., Castillo, L. J., & Earle, T. (1996). Ideology, materialization, and power strategies. Current Anthropology, 37(1), 1531.Google Scholar
Donnan, C. B. (1978). Moche Art of Peru: Pre-Columbian Symbolic Communication. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California.Google Scholar
Donnan, C. B. (1992). Ceramics of Ancient Peru. Los Angeles: Fowler Museum of Cultural History, University of California.Google Scholar
Donnan, C. B. (2007). Moche Tombs at Dos Cabezas. Los Angeles: UCLA, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Donnan, C. B., & McClelland, D. (1979). The Burial Theme in Moche Iconography. Studies in Pre-Columbian Art and Archaeology No. 21. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection.Google Scholar
Eeckhout, P. (2006). Semillas Sadradas: El Ishpingo (Nectandra sp.) en Pachacamac, Costa Central del Perú. In Olivera, D. E., & Yacobaccio, H. D., Change in the Andes: Origins of Social Complexity, Pastoralism and Agriculture. Oxford: BAR Publishing, 201210.Google Scholar
Eeckhout, P. (2013). Change and permanency on the coast of Ancient Peru: The religious site of Pachacamac. Archaeology of Religious Change, 45(1), 137160.Google Scholar
Eeckhout, P., & Owens, L. S. (eds). (2015). Funerary Practices and Models in the Ancient Andes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Galindo, P., & Srihongse, S. (1967). Evidence of recent jungle yellow-fever activity in Eastern Panama. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 36, 151161.Google Scholar
Gamboa, J. (2020). Un Personaje Elusivo: Los Mono en el Estilo Cerámico Casma de la Costa Norcentral de Perú (ca. 800–1350 DC). Chungara Revista de Anthropología Chilena, 52, 285303.Google Scholar
Garve, R., Garve, M., Türp, J. C., & Meyer, C. G. (2017). Labrets in Africa and Amazonia: Medical implications and cultural determinants. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 22(2), 232240.Google Scholar
Gebo, D. (1992). Locomotor and positional behavior in Alouatta palliata and Cebus capucinus. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 26, 277290.Google Scholar
Goepfert, N. (2008). Ofrendas y sacrificio de animals in la cultura Mochica: El ejemplo de la Plataforma Uhle, Complejo Arqueológico Huacas del Sol y de la Luna. In Arqueológia Mochica: Nuevos Enfoques. Actas del Primer Congreso Internacional de Jóvenes Investigadores de la Cultura Mochica, Lima, 4-5 de Agosto de 2004. Lima: Institut Français d’Études Anides-Fondo Editorial de la Pontificia Universidad Católico del Perú, 231244.Google Scholar
Goepfert, N. (2011). Frayer la route d’un monde inversé. Sacrifice et offrandes animals dans la culture Mochica (100-800 apr. J.-C.), côte nord du Pérou. Paris Monographs in American Archaeology 28. Oxford: BAR Publishing.Google Scholar
Goepfert, N. (2012). New zooarchaeological and funerary perspectives on Mochica culture (A.D.100–800), Peru. Journal of Field Archaeology, 37(2), 102120.Google Scholar
Haraway, D. (2003). The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness. Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press.Google Scholar
Helms, M. (1998). Access to Origins: Affines, Ancestors and Aristocrats. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Hill, E. (2016). Images of ancestors: Identifying the revered dead in Moche iconography. In Hill, E., & Hageman, J. B., eds., The Archaeology of Ancestors: Death, Memory, and Veneration. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 189212.Google Scholar
Janson, C., & Boinski, S. (1992). Morphological and behavioral adaptations for foraging in generalist primates: The case of cebines. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 88, 483498.Google Scholar
Karadimas, D. (2016). Monkeys, wasps and gods: Graphic perspectives on middle horizon and later Pre-Hispanic painted funerary textiles from the Peruvian Coast. Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos. Available at: https://journals.openedition.org/nuevomundo/69281 (Accessed July 1, 2020)Google Scholar
Kaulicke, P. (2020). Early social complexity in Northern Peru and its Amazonian connections. In Pearce, A. J., Beresford-Jones, D. G., & Heggarty, P., eds., London: UCL Press, 103–114.Google Scholar
Langdon, S. (1990). From Monkey to man: The evolution of a geometric sculptural type. American Journal of Archaeology, 94(3), 407424.Google Scholar
Macri, M. J., & Looper, M. G. (2003). The New Catalog of Maya Hieroglyphs. Volume 1. The Classic Period Inscriptions. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
Masseti, M. (2015). The early 8th century AD zoomorphic iconography of the wall decorations in Qasr al-Amra Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. Anthropozoologica, 50(2), 6985.Google Scholar
Mauricio, A. C., & Castro, J. (2007). Informe Técnico de las Excavaciones en el Área 42 de San José de Moro-Temporada de 2007. In Castillo, L. J., ed., Programa Arqueológico San José de Moro, Informe de Investigaciones Temporada de 2007. Lima: Pontificia Universidad de Católica del Perú, 102161.Google Scholar
Millaire, J.-F. (2010). Primary state formation in the Virú Valley, north coast of Peru. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(14), 61866191.Google Scholar
Montoya, M. (2004). Estudio Fitoquímico y Bioquímico de Semillas Prehispánicas de Nectandra sp. ECIPERU: Encuentro Científico Internacional, 1(1), 15.Google Scholar
Morphy, H. (1989). Introduction. In Morphy, H., ed., Animals into Art. London: Unwin Hyman, 120.Google Scholar
Munn, N. (1966). Visual categories: An approach to the study of representational systems. American Anthropologist, 68, 936950.Google Scholar
Pareja, M. N. (2017). Monkey and ape iconography in Minoan Art. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Temple University.Google Scholar
Pareja, M. N., McKinney, T., Mayhew, J. A., Setchell, J. M., Nash, S. D., & Heaton, R. (2020). A new identification of the monkeys depicted in a Bronze Age Wall Painting from Akrotiri, Thera. Primates, 61, 159168.Google Scholar
Prieto, G., & Cuiscanqui, S. (2007). Informe Técnico de la Excavaciones en el Área 35-Temporada 2007. In Castillo Butters, L. J., ed., Programa Arqueológico San José de Moro, Informe de Investigaciones Temporada de 2007, Lima: Pontificia Universidad Católico del Perú, 3679.Google Scholar
Quilter, J. (1997). The narrative approach to Moche iconography. Latin American Antiquity, 8(2), 113133.Google Scholar
Reitz, E. (2003). Resource use through time at Paloma, Peru. Bulletin of Florida Museum of Natural History, 440, 6580.Google Scholar
Reynel, C., Pennington, R. T., & Särkinen, T. (2013). Cómo Se Formó la Diversidad Ecológica del Perú. Lima: Jesús Bellido.Google Scholar
Rice, P. M., & South, K. E. (2015). Revisiting monkeys on pots: A contextual consideration of primate imagery on classic lowland Maya Pottery. Ancient Mesoamerica, 26, 275294.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. (2008). The stranger-king or, elementary forms of the politics of life. Indonesia and the Malay World, 36(105), 177199.Google Scholar
Saunders, N. J. (1994). Predators of culture: Jaguar symbolism and Mesoamerican elites. World Archaeology, 26, 104117.Google Scholar
Scher, S. (2012). Markers of masculinity: Phallic representation in Moche art. Boletín Instituto Frances de Estudios Andinos, 41(2), 169196.Google Scholar
Shady, R., & Leyva, C. (eds.). (2003). La Ciudad Sagrada de Caral-Supe. Lima: Instituto Nacional de Cultura.Google Scholar
Stross, B. (2008). K’u: The divine monkey. Journal of Mesoamerican Languages and Linguistics, 1, 134.Google Scholar
Swenson, E. (2007). Adaptive strategies or ideological innovations? Interpreting sociopolitical developments in the Jequetepeque Valley of Peru during the Late Moche Period. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 26, 253282.Google Scholar
Swenson, E. (2008). San Ildefonso and the “Popularization” of Moche Ideology in the Jequetepeque Valley. In Castillo Butters, L. J., Bernier, H., Lockard, G., & Yong, J. R., eds., Arqueologia mochica: Nuevos Enfoques. Lima: Fondo Editorial Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 411431.Google Scholar
Swenson, E. (2018). Sacrificial landscapes and the anatomy of Moche biopolitics: (AD200–800). In Jennings, J., & Swenson, E., eds., Powerful Places in the Ancient Andes. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 247286.Google Scholar
Swenson, E., & Seoane, F. (2019). Proyecto de Investigación Arqueológica Jatanca-Huaca Colorada-Tecapa Valle de Jequetepeque-Temporada 2018. Lima: Ministry of Culture.Google Scholar
Topic, J. R., & Lange Topic, T. (1983). Coast-highland relations in Northern Peru: Some observations on routes, networks, and scales of interaction. In Leventhal, R. & Kolata, A., eds., Civilization in the Ancient Americas. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico, 237259.Google Scholar
Toyne, J. M. (2015). The body sacrificed. Journal of Religion and Violence, 3(1), 137172.Google Scholar
Trever, L. S. (2019). A Moche riddle in clay: Object knowledge and art work in ancient Peru. The Art Bulletin, 101(4), 1838.Google Scholar
Uceda, S. (2001). Investigations at Huaca de la Luna, Moche Valley: An example of Moche religious architecture. In Pillsbury, J., ed., Moche Art and Archaeology in Ancient Peru. Washington, DC: Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, and National Gallery of Art, 4767.Google Scholar
Uceda, S. (2010). Theocracy and secularism: Relationships between the temple and urban nucleus and political change at the Huacas de Moche. In Quilter, J., & Castillo, L. J., eds., New Perspectives on Moche Political Organization. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 132158.Google Scholar
Uceda, S., Morales, R., & Mujica, E. (2016). Huaca de la Luna. Templos y dioses Moche. Lima: Fundación Backus & World Monument Fund.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2005). The targeted monkey: A re-evaluation of predation on New World primates. Journal of Anthropological Sciences, 83, 89109.Google Scholar
Van Buren, M. (1996). Rethinking the vertical archipelago: Ethnicity, exchange, and history in the south-central Andes. American Anthropologist, 98(2), 338351.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, E. B. (1998). Cosmological deixis and Amerindian perspectivism. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 4(3), 469488.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, E. B. (2004). Exchanging perspectives: The transformation of objects into subjects in Amerindian ontologies. Common Knowledge, 10(3), 463484.Google Scholar
Wassén, S. H. (1987). “Ulluchu” in Moche iconography and blood ceremonies: The search for identification. Årstryck, 1985 /1986, 5985.Google Scholar
Wołoszyn, J. Z., & Piwowar, K. (2015). Sodomites, Siamese twins, and scholars: Same-sex relationships in Moche art. American Anthropologist, 117(2), 285301.Google Scholar
Zedeño, M. N. (2009). Animating by association: Index objects and relational taxonomies. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 19(3), 407417.Google Scholar

References

Alonso, A. C., & Carvalho, A. S. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Chiropotes utahickae (Hershkovitz, 1985) no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. Brasilia: ICMBio.Google Scholar
Alves, S. L., Buss, G., Ravetta, A. L., Messias, M. R., & Carvalho, A. S. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Sapajus apella (Linnaeus, 1758) no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. Brasilia: ICMBio.Google Scholar
Barnett, A. A., Borges, S. H., Castilho, C. V., Neri, F. M., & Shapley, R. L. (2002). Primates of the Jaú National Park, Amazonas, Brazil. Neotropical Primates, 10(2), 6570.Google Scholar
Berra, J. C. A. (2015). As Pinturas Rupestres Pré-Históricas de Contorno Aberto na Serra do Lajeado – TO: Similaridades e Diversidades com as Pinturas de Contorno Aberto no Parque Nacional Serra da Capivara. PhD dissertation, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco.Google Scholar
Berra, J. C. A. (2004). As Pinturas Rupestres na Serra do Lajeado – Médio Curso do Rio Tocantins. MSc dissertation, Universidade de São Paulo.Google Scholar
Bezerra, B. M. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Cacajao melanocephalus (Humboldt, 1811) no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. Brasilia: ICMBio.Google Scholar
Boubli, J. P., Da Silva, M. N. F., Amado, M. V., Herbk, T., Pontual, F. B., & Farias, I. (2008). A taxonomic reassessment of black uakari monkey, Cacajao melanocephalus, Humboldt (1811), with the description of two new species. International Journal of Primatology, 29, 723741.Google Scholar
Braga, A. (2015). Paisagens e Técnicas Distintas, Motivos Semelhantes: a Dispersão da Arte Rupestre no Rio Tocantins, o Caso de Palmas e Lajeado – TO, Brasil. PhD dissertation, Universidade de Trás-Os-Montes e Alto Douro.Google Scholar
Cavallini, M. S. (2014). As Gravuras Rupestres da Bacia do Baixo Rio Urubu: Levantamento e Análise Gráfica do Sítio Caretas, Itacoatiara, Estado do Amazonas. Uma Proposta de Contextualização. MSc dissertation, , Universidade de São Paulo.Google Scholar
Cavallini, M. S., Stampanoni Bassi, F. S., & Gallo, D. L. R. (2015). Petróglifos do rio Urubu. Rumo à contextualização de uma arte rupestre amazônica. Arkeos, 37, 567588.Google Scholar
Consens, M. (1988). First rock paintings in the Amazon basin. Rock Art Research, 5 (1), 6972.Google Scholar
Consens, M. (1989). Arte rupestre no Pará: análise de alguns sítios de Monte Alegre. Dédalo, 1 (special issue), 265278.Google Scholar
Corrêa, M. V. M. (1994). As Gravações e Pinturas Rupestres na Área do Reservatório da UHE-Balbina - AM. MSc dissertation, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro.Google Scholar
Greer, J. (1995). Rock art chronology in the Middle Orinoco Basin of Southwestern Venezuela. Unpublished PhD dissertation,University of Missouri.Google Scholar
Greer, J. (2001). Lowland South America. Handbook of Rock Art Research. Whitley, D. S., ed., New York: Altamira Press, 665706.Google Scholar
Greer, J., & Greer, M. (2006). Human figures in the cave paintings of Southern Venezuela. 1994 IRAC Proceedings, Rock Art-World Heritage. American Rock Art Research Association, 155166.Google Scholar
Gregorin, R. (2006). Taxonomia e variação geográfica das espécies do gênero Alouatta Lacépède (Primates, Atelidae) no Brasil. Revista Brasileira de Zoologia, 23(1), 64144.Google Scholar
Hartt, C. F. (1871). Brazilian rock inscriptions. American Naturalist, 5 (3), 139147.Google Scholar
Hershkovitz, P. (1984). Taxonomy of squirrel monkeys, genus Saimiri (Cebidae, Platyrrhini): A preliminary report with description of a hitherto unnamed form. American Journal of Primatology, 6, 257312.Google Scholar
Hershkovitz, P. (1985). A preliminary taxonomic review of the South American bearded saki monkeys, genus Chiropotes (Cebidae, Platyrrhini), with the description ofa new subspecies. Fieldiana: Zoology, n.s., 27, 146.Google Scholar
Hershkovitz, P. (1987). Uacaries, New World monkeys of the genus Cacajao (Cebidae, Platyrrhini): A preliminary taxonomic review with the description of a new subspecies. American Journal of Primatology, 12, 153.Google Scholar
Hill, W. C. O. (1960). Primates, Comparative Anatomy and Taxonomy. Vol. IV - Cebidae, Part A. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Hill, W. C. O. (1962). Primates, Comparative Anatomy and Taxonomy. Vol. V - Cebidae, Part B. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Humboldt, A. (1811). Recueil d’Observations de Zoologie et d’Anatomie Comparée, Faites dans l’Océan Atlantique dans l’Interieur du Nouveau Continent et dans la Mer du Sud Pendant les Années 1799, 1800, 1801, 1802 et 1803 par Al. Humboldt et A. Bonpland. 2ème Volume. Paris Levrault Schoell.Google Scholar
Iwanaga, S. (2004). Levantamento de mamíferos diurnos de médio e grande porte no Parque Nacional do Jaú: resultados preliminares. In Borges, S. H., Iwanaga, S., Durigan, C. C., and Pinheiro, M. R., eds., Janelas para a Biodiversidade no Parque Nacional do Jaú: uma Estratégia para o Estudo da Biodiversidade na Amazônia. Brazil, Amazonas, Manaus: Fundação Vitória Amazônica, 195207.Google Scholar
Koch-Grünberg, T. (1907). Südamerikanische Felszeichnungen. Berlin: Ernest Wasmuth.Google Scholar
Koch-Grünberg, T. (2010). Petróglifos Sul-Americanos. Transl. J. B. Poça da Silva, org. E. Pereira. Brazil, Belém/São Paulo: Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi / Instituto Socioambiental.Google Scholar
Kellogg, R., & Goldman, E. A. (1944). Review of the spider monkeys. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 96, 145.Google Scholar
Martins, A. B., Calouro, A. L., & Ravetta, A. L. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Sapajus macrocephalus (Spix 1823) no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. ICMBio. Available at: www.icmbio.gov.br/portal/biodiversidade/fauna-brasileira/estado-de-conservacao/7276-mamiferos-sapajus-macrocephalus-macaco-prego.htmlGoogle Scholar
Meggers, B. (1985). Advances in Brazilian archaeology, 1935–1985. American Antiquity, 50(2), 153158.Google Scholar
Mello, G. B. R. (2013). Yurupari – o Dono das Flautas Sagradas dos Povos do Rio Negro: Mitologia e Simbolismo. Brazil, Belém: Pakatatu.Google Scholar
Mercês, M. P., Lynch-Alfaro, J. W., Ferreira, W. A., Harada, M. L., & Silva-Júnior, J. S. (2015). Morphology and mitochondrial phylogenetics reveal that the Amazon River separates two eastern squirrel monkey species: Saimiri sciureus and S. collinsi. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 82(B), 426435.Google Scholar
Migliacio, M. C. (2017). Pedra Preta de Paranaíba: arte rupestre na ocupação do Alto Tapajós, Amazônia Mato-grossense. Cadernos de Ciências Humanas – Especiaria, 17(30), 173201.Google Scholar
Mourthé, I., Muniz, C. C., & Rylands, A. B. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Ateles belzebuth (E. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1806) no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. ICMBio. Available at: www.icmbio.gov.br/portal/biodiversidade/fauna-brasileira/lista-de-especies/7189-mamiferos-ateles-belzebuth-macaco-aranha.htmlGoogle Scholar
Navarro, A. G., & Silva-Júnior, J. S. (2019). Cosmologia e Adaptação Ecológica: o caso dos apliques-mamíferos das estearias maranhenses. Revista Anthropologicas, 30(2), 203233.Google Scholar
Neville, M. K., Glander, K. E., Braza, F., & Rylands, A. B. (1988). The howling monkeys, genus Alouatta. In Mittermeier, R. A., Rylands, A. B., Coimbra-Filho, A. F., & da Fonseca, G. A. B., eds., Ecology and Behavior of Neotropical Primates. Vol. 2. Washington DC: World Wildlife Fund, 349453.Google Scholar
Oliveira, M. C. (2013). Arte Rupestre em Rondônia. Brazil, Rondônia: Presidente Médici.Google Scholar
Pereira, E. (2000a). As representações antropomorfas nas gravuras rupestres de Prainha, Pará, Brasil. Revista CLIO. Série Arqueológica, 14, 3954.Google Scholar
Pereira, E. (2000b). Salvamento e resgate do Sítio Pedra das Arraias, Senador José Porfírio. Technical Report. Brazil, Belém: Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi.Google Scholar
Pereira, E. (2004). Arte Rupestre na Amazônia - Pará. Brazil, Belém/São Paulo: Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi / Universidade Estadual Paulista.Google Scholar
Pereira, E. (2006). Historia de la investigación sobre el arte rupestre en la Amazonía brasileña. Revista de Arqueología Americana, 24, 6798.Google Scholar
Pereira, E. (2008). Arqueologia na região da Serra das Andorinhas. In Gorayeb, P. S. S., ed., Parque Martírios-Andorinhas: Conhecimento, História e Preservação. Brazil, Belém: Universidade Federal do Pará.Google Scholar
Pereira, E. (2012). A Arte Rupestre de Monte Alegre, Pará, Amazônia, Brasil. Brazil, Belém: Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi.Google Scholar
Porro, A. (2010). Arte e Simbolismo Xamânico na Amazônia. Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Série Ciências Humanas, 5(1), 129144.Google Scholar
Pough, F. W., Janis, C. M., & Heiser, J. B. (2005). Vertebrate Life. 7th ed. New York: Pearson.Google Scholar
Rauschert, M. (1959). Felszeichnungen am unteren Erepecuru. Zeitschriff für Ethnologie, 84(1), 110123.Google Scholar
Ribeiro, P. A. M., Ribeiro, C. T., Guapindaia, V. L. C., Pinto, F. C. B., & Félix, L. A. (1986). Projeto Arqueológico de Salvamento na Região de Boa Vista, Território Federal de Roraima, Brasil - Segunda Etapa de Campo (1985) - Nota prévia. Revista do Centro de Ensino e Pesquisas Arqueológicas da Universidade de Santa Cruz do Sul, 13(16), 548.Google Scholar
Ribeiro, P. A. M., Machado, A. L., & Guapindaia, V. L. C. (1987). Projeto Arqueológico de Salvamento na Região de Boa Vista, Território Federal de Roraima, Brasil - Primeira Etapa de Campo (1985). Revista do Centro de Ensino e Pesquisas Arqueológicas da Universidade de Santa Cruz do Sul, 14(17), 181.Google Scholar
Ribeiro, P. A. M., Ribeiro, C. T., & Pinto, F. C. B. (1989). Levantamentos arqueológicos no Território Federal de Roraima - Terceira Etapa de Campo (1987). Revista do Centro de Ensino e Pesquisas Arqueológicas da Universidade de Santa Cruz do Sul, 16(19), 548.Google Scholar
Ribeiro, P. A. M., Guapindaia, V. L. C., Ribeiro, C. T., & Machado, A. L. (1996). Pitture rupestri nel Territorio di Roraima – Brasile. Bollettino del Centro Camuno di Studi Preistorici, 29, 151154.Google Scholar
Rondon, C. M. S. (1953). Indios do Brasil do Norte do Rio Amazonas. Rio de Janeiro: Conselho Nacional de Proteção aos Indios.Google Scholar
Rylands, A. B., & Régis, T. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Ateles paniscus (Linnaeus, 1758) no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. Brasilia: ICMBio.Google Scholar
Rylands, A. B., & Santos, M. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Alouatta macconelli Elliot, 1910 no Brasil. Processo de avaliação do risco de extinção da fauna brasileira. Brasilia: ICMBio.Google Scholar
Silva-Júnior, J. S., Figueiredo-Ready, W. M. B., & Ferrari, S. F. (2013). Taxonomy and geographic distribution of the Pitheciidae. In Veiga, L. M., Barnett, A. A., Ferrari, S. F., & Norconk, M. A., eds., Evolutionary Biology and Conservation of Titis, Sakis and Uacaris. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 3142.Google Scholar
Silva-Júnior, J. S., Ravetta, A. L., Alfaro, J. W. L., & Valença-Montenegro, M. M. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Saimiri collinsi Osgood, 1916 no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. Brasilia: ICMBio.Google Scholar
Stradelli, E. (1900). Iscrizioni indigene della regione dell’Uaupés. Bolletino della Società Geografica Italiana, ser. 4, 1(37), 457483.Google Scholar
Urbina Rangel, F. (1994). El hombre sentado: mitos, ritos y petroglifos en el río Caquetá. Boletín del Museo del Oro, 36, 67111.Google Scholar
Urbina Rangel, F. (2004). Dïijoma. El Hombre-Serpiente-Águila. Mito Uitoto de la Amazonía. Colombia, Bogotá: Convenio Andrés Bello.Google Scholar
Urbina Rangel, F. (2015). Perros de guerra, caballos y vacunos en el arte rupestre de la serranía de la Lindosa, Río Guayabero, Guaviare, Colombia. In Rupestreweb. Available at: www.rupestreweb.info/serranialindosa.htmlGoogle Scholar
Valença-Montenegro, M. M., Fialho, M. S., Carvalho, A. S., et al. (2015). Avaliação do Risco de Extinção de Alouatta belzebul (Linnaeus, 1766) no Brasil. Processo de Avaliação do Risco de Extinção da Fauna Brasileira. Brasilia: ICMBio.Google Scholar
Valle, R. (2010). Gravuras rupestres no Rio Negro: Panorama Preliminar. In Pereira, E. & Guapindaia, V. L. C., eds., Arqueologia Amazônica, Vol. 1. Brazil, Belém: Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, 317340.Google Scholar
Valle, R. (2012). Mentes Graníticas e Mentes Areníticas Fronteira Geo-Cognitiva nas Gravuras Rupestres do Baixo Rio Negro, Amazônia Setentrional, Volumes I e II. Tese, Programa de Pós Graduação em Arqueologia, Museu de Arqueologia e Etnologia da Universidade de São Paulo.Google Scholar
Valle, R. (2014). Arte Rupestre do Juruparí? Explorando relações iconográficas entre gravuras rupestres e o complexo mito-ritual do Jurupari no baixo rio Negro, Amazônia. In Rostain, S., ed., Antes de Orellana – Actas del 3er Encuentro Internacional de Arqueologia Amazónica. Col. Actes et Mémoires de l’Institut Français d’Études Andines, 37. Peru, Lima: Instituto Francés de Estudios Andinos, 339345.Google Scholar
van Roosmalen, M. G., & Klein, L. L. (1988). The spider monkeys, genus Ateles. In Mittermeier, R. A., Rylands, A. B., Coimbra-Filho, A. F., & da Fonseca, G. A. B., eds., Ecology and Behavior of Neotropical Primates, Vol. 2. Washington, DC: World Wildlife Fund, 455537.Google Scholar
van Roosmalen, M. G., Mittermeier, R. A., & Milton, K. (1981). The bearded sakis, genus Chiropotes. In Coimbra-Filho, A. F. & Mittermeier, R. A., eds., Ecology and Behavior of Neotropical Primates, Vol. 1. Brazil, Rio de Janeiro: Academia Brasileira de Ciências, 419441.Google Scholar
Veiga, L. M., & Ferrari, S. F. (2013). Ecology and behavior of bearded sakis (genus Chiropotes). In Veiga, L. M., Barnett, A. A., Ferrari, S. F., & Norconk, M. A.. eds., Evolutionary Biology and Conservation of Titis, Sakis and Uacaris. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 240249.Google Scholar
Wallace, A. R. (1979). Viagem pelos Rios Amazonas e Negro. Brazil, Belo Horizonte: Itatiaia.Google Scholar

References

Bélo, P. S. (2012). Alterações antrópicas em restos fósseis da megafauna: tafonomia do sítio arqueológico e paleontológico “Toca da Janela da Barra do Antonião”, área arqueológica do Parque Nacional da Serra da Capivara, Piauí, Brasil. Unpublished Master’s dissertation, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco.Google Scholar
Bélo, P. S. (2017). Extinção e a interação homem-megafauna no final do Pleistoceno e início do Holoceno, nos estados de Pernambuco e Pauí, Nordeste do Brasil. Unpublished Doctoral thesis, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco.Google Scholar
Bélo, P. S., & Oliveira, É. V. (2013). Análise tafonômica de marcas em restos esqueletais de hippidion, sítio Toca da Janela da Barra do Antonião, Piauí, Brasil. Estudos Geológicos, 23(2), 5979.Google Scholar
Carvalho, O. A., Etchevarne, C. A., & Queiroz, A. N. (2019). Associação de Vasos Cerâmicos e Ossos de Animais: Ritual Funerário ou Resto de Cozinha em Populações do Passado Provenientes da Região Nordeste do Brasil? Revista Etnobiología, 17, 7688.Google Scholar
Dantas, M. A. T. (2012). Contribuição ao conhecimento da Megafauna Pleistocênica da região intertropical brasileira. Unpublished Doctoral thesis, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais.Google Scholar
Dantas, M. A. T., Queiroz, A. N., Santos, F. V., & Cozzuol, M. A. (2012). An anthropogenic modification in an Eremotherium tooth from northeastern Brazil. Quaternary International, 253, 107109.Google Scholar
Guérin, C. (1991). La faune de vertébrés du Pléistocène supérieur de l’aire archéologique de São Raimundo Nonato (Piauí, Brésil). Comptes rendus de l’Académie des Sciences de Paris, 312(2), 567592.Google Scholar
Guérin, C., Curvello, M. A., Faure, M., Hugueney, M., & Mourerchauvire, C. (1993). La faune pléistocène du Piauí (Nordeste du Brésil): implications paléoécologiques et biochronologiques. Quaternaria Nova, 3, 303341.Google Scholar
Guérin, C., Curvello, M. A., Faure, M., Hugueney, M., & Mourerchauvire, C. (1996a). A fauna pleistocênica do Piauí (Nordeste do Brasil): Relações paleoecológicas e biocronológicas. Anais da Reunião Internacional sobre o Povoamento das Américas, São Raimundo Nonato 1993, Fumdhamentos, 1(1), 51111.Google Scholar
Guérin, C., Galindo Lima, M., & Parenti, F. (1996b). La transition Pléistocène/Holocène à Conceição das Creoulas (Pernambouco, Brésil): Mégafaune disparue et industries lithiques. Proceedings of the XIII International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences, 5, 339343.Google Scholar
Hadler, P., Mayer, E. L, Motta, F., & Ribeiro, A. M. (2018). Fossil bats from the Quaternary of Serra da Capivara, northeast Brazil. Quaternary International, 464, 411416.Google Scholar
Haslam, M., Falótico, T., Luncz, L. V., & Ottoni, E. (2015). Archaeological investigation of capuchin monkey (Sapajus libidinosus) cashew processing sites at Serra da Capivara National Park, BrazilFolia Primatologica86, 235386.Google Scholar
Lima, J. M. D. (1985). Arqueologia da Furna do Estrago, Brejo da Madre de Deus - PE. Clio - Revista do Curso de Mestrado em História, 3, 97111.Google Scholar
Lima, J. M. D. (1986). Arqueologia da Furna do Estrago, Brejo da Madre de Deus – Pernambuco. Master’s dissertation, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco.Google Scholar
Lima, J. M. D. (1988). Alimentação do homem préhistórico na região da caatinga. Revista de Arqueologia, 5(1), 103114.Google Scholar
Lima, J. M. D. (1991). Dois períodos de subsistência no Agreste Pernambucano: 9.000 e 2.000 A. P. CLIO, Série Arqueológica (Número extraordinário dedicado aos Anais do I Simpósio de Pré-História do Nordeste Brasileiro), 4, 5760.Google Scholar
Lima, J. M. D. (1992). Estudos zoo e fitoarqueológicos em Pernambuco. Symposium, 34(2), 146179.Google Scholar
Lima, J. M. D. (2001). El sitio Furna do Estrago – Brasil en una perspectiva antropológica y social. Unpublished Doctoral thesis, Universidad Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Lima, J. M. D. (2012). A Furna do Estrago no Brejo da Madre de Deus, PEAntropologia69, 1159.Google Scholar
Locks, M., Beltrão, M. C., & Cordeiro, D. (1993). Região arqueológica de Central – Bahia - Brasil: N° 2 – Abrigo da Lesma: Os mamíferos. CLIO, Série Arqueológica, 1(9), 6975.Google Scholar
Locks, M. Beltrão, M., & Amorim, J. (1995). Região arqueológica de Central, Bahia, Brasil: Dasypodidae sub-recente (Mammalia-Edentata). Anais V Congresso da Associação Brasileira de Estudos do Quaternário, 46–51.Google Scholar
Locks, M., Beltrão, M., Soares, A. A., & Ribeiro, S. (1997). Região arqueológica de Central, Bahia, Brasil: associação bioestratigráfica de mamíferos fósseis e sub-recentes. Boletim de Resumos 15° Congresso Brasileiro de Paleontologia, 118, São Paulo.Google Scholar
Martins, A. B., Bezerra, B., Fialho, M., Jerusalinsky, L., Laroque, P., Lynch Alfaro, J., Melo, F., & Valença Montenegro, M. 2019Sapajus libidinosusThe IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019: e.T136346A70613454.Google Scholar
Peters, E. T., & Oliveira, E. V. (2019). Marcas em fósseis de Megafauna do sítio Conceição das Creoulas, Pleistoceno Superior-Holoceno, Salgueiro, PernambucoEstudos Geológicos29(2), 3139.Google Scholar
Prous, A. (1992). Arqueologia Brasileira. Brasília: Ed. Universidade de Brasília.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N. (1994a). A presença do Tupinambis teguixin (Linnaeus, 1758) nos restos alimentares do homem pré-histórico na região do Agreste de Pernambuco, Brasil. Biociências, 2(1), 149157.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N. (1994b). Fauna reptiliana de Brejo da Madre de Deus, Pernambuco, Brasil, com a identificação de restos alimentares do sítio arqueológico Furna do Estrago. Unpublished Master’s dissertation, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N. (2001). Contribution à l’étude archéozoologique des vertébrés de cinq sites préhistoriques de trois régions du Brésil. Unpublished Doctoral thesis, Université de Genève.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N., & Cardoso, G. M. B. (1995/1996). Nota prévia sobre a fauna holocênica de vertebrados do sítio arqueológico “Pedra do Alexandre”, Carnaúba dos Dantas-RN, Brasil. CLIO, Série Arqueológica, 1(11): 137140.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N., & Chaix, L. (1999). Os vestígios faunísticos provenientes dos sítios arqueológicos: Uma visão geral – A fauna arqueológica do sítio Justino. In Simon, C., Carvalho, O. A., Queiroz, A. N., & Chaix, L., eds., Enterramentos na Necrópole do Justino – Xingó, Projeto Arqueológico de Xingó, Convênio PETROBRAS/CHESF/UFS, Aracaju, SE: Universidade Federal de Sergipe, 4955.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N. & Carvalho, O. A (2008). Problems in the interpretation of Brazilian archaeofaunas: different contexts and the important role of taphonomy. Quaternary International, 18, 7589.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N.Carvalho, O. A., Silva, J. A., & Cardoso, C. E. (2014). Whole vertebrates and invertebrates related to human burials from Xingo Region, Sergipe, and Alagoas States, Northeastern Brazil. Cuadernos del Instituto Nacional de Antropología y Pensamiento Latinoamericano, 1, 122128.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N., Cardoso, C. E, & Carvalho, O. A. (2017). Animais como psicopompos nas sepulturas do sítio arqueológico Justino? (Canindé de São Francisco — Sub-região de Xingó — Sergipe, Brasil). Antípoda. Revista de Antropología y Arqueología, 28, 5773.Google Scholar
Queiroz, A. N., Guérin, C., Silva, J., Faure, M., & Carvalho, O. A. (2018). Os adornos em osso de Mazama na sepultura 118, cemitério B, sítio arqueológico Justino, Canindé de São Francisco, Sergipe, Brasil. Clio Arqueológica, 33(1), 1025.Google Scholar
Silva, R. R. N. (2013). Predação de primatas não humanos pelo homem do Holoceno na região do sítio arqueológico Pedra do Alexandre – Rio grande do Norte. Anais do II Congresso Latino Americano e XV Congresso Brasileiro de Primatologia. Recife: Sociedade Brasileira de Primatologia, 142.Google Scholar
Silva, J. A., Carvalho, O. A., & Queiroz, A. N. (2014). A Cultura Material Associada a Sepultamentos no Brasil: Arqueologia dos Adornos. Clio. Série Arqueológica, 29, 4582.Google Scholar
Simon, C., Carvalho, O. A., Queiroz, A. N., , L., & Chaix, L. (1999). Enterramentos na Necrópole do Justino–Xingó, Projeto Arqueológico de Xingó, Convênio PETROBRAS/CHESF/UFS. Aracaju, SE: Universidade Federal de Sergipe.Google Scholar
Teixeira-Santos, I., Sianto, L., Araújo, A., Reinhard, K. J., & Chaves, S. A. M. (2015). The evidence of medicinal plants in human sediments from Furna do Estrago prehistoric site, Pernambuco State, BrazilQuaternary International377, 112117.Google Scholar
Urbani, B. (2013). Arqueoprimatología: reflexión sobre una disciplina y dos localidades antropoespeleológicas venezolona. Boletín del Sociedad Venezolana de Espeleología, 45, 6668.Google Scholar
Urbani, B., & Gil, E.. 2001. Consideraciones sobre restos de primates de un yacimiento arqueológico del Oriente de Venezuela (América del Sur): Cueva del Guácharo, estado Monagas. Munibe (Antropologia-Arkeologia), 53, 135142.Google Scholar

References

Amanzougaghene, N., Fenollar, F., Davoust, B., et al. (2019). Mitochondrial diversity and phylogeographic analysis of Pediculus humanus reveals a new Amazonian clade “F.Infection, Genetics and Evolution, 70, 18.Google Scholar
Araújo, A., Ferreira, L. F., Guidon, N., et al. (2000). Ten thousand years of head lice infection. Parasitology Today, 16(7), 269.Google Scholar
Ascunce, M. S., Toups, M. A., Kassu, G., Fane, J., Scholl, K., & Reed, D. L. (2013). Nuclear genetic diversity in human lice (Pediculus humanus) reveals continental differences and high inbreeding among worldwide populations. PLoS ONE, 8(2), e57619.Google Scholar
Barker, S. C., Whiting, M., Johnson, K. P., & Murrell, A. (2003). Phylogeny of the lice (Insecta, Phthiraptera) inferred from small subunit rRNA. Zoologica Scripta, 32(5), 407414.Google Scholar
Blanc, G., & Baltazard, M. (1941). Recherches expérimentales sur la peste. L’infection du pou de l’homme, Pediculus corporis de Geer. Comptes Rendus de l’Académie Des Sciences, 213, 849851.Google Scholar
Boutellis, A., Abi-Rached, L., & Raoult, D. (2014). The origin and distribution of human lice in the world. Infection, Genetics and Evolution, 23, 209217.Google Scholar
Clayton, D. H. (1990). Host specificity of Strigiphilus owl lice (Ischnocera: Philopteridae), with the description of new species and host associations. Journal of Medical Entomology, 27(3), 257265.Google Scholar
Clayton, D. H., Gregory, R. D., & Price, R. D. (1992). Comparative ecology of Neotropical bird lice (Insecta: Phthiraptera). Journal of Animal Ecology, 61(3), 781795.Google Scholar
Cohn, D. L. (2017). Lice. In Fuentes, A., ed., The International Encyclopedia of Primatology. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons Inc., 12.Google Scholar
Coppo, J. A., Moreira, R. A., & Lombardero, O. J. (1979). Parasitism in the primates of CAPRIM. Acta Zoologica Lilloana, 35, 912.Google Scholar
Cortés-Ortiz, L., Bermingham, E., Rico, C., Rodríguez-Luna, E., Sampaio, I., & Ruiz-García, M. (2003). Molecular systematics and biogeography of the Neotropical monkey genus, Alouatta. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 26(1), 6481.Google Scholar
Cortés-Ortiz, L., Rylands, A. B., & Mittermeier, R. A. (2015). The taxonomy of howler monkeys: Integrating old and new knowledge from morphological and genetic studies. In Kowalewski, M. M., Garber, P. A., Cortés-Ortiz, L., Urbani, B., & Youlatos, D., eds., Howler Monkeys: Adaptive Radiation, Systematics, and Morphology. New York: Springer, 5584.Google Scholar
Crockett, C. M., & Eisenberg, J. F. (1987). Howlers: variations in group size and demography. In Smuts, B. B., Cheney, D. L., Seyfarth, R. M., Wrangham, R. W., & Struhsaker, T. T., eds., Primate Societies. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 5468.Google Scholar
Drali, R., Shako, J.-C., Davoust, B., Diatta, G., & Raoult, D. (2015). A new clade of African body and head lice infected by Bartonella quintana and Yersinia pestis—Democratic Republic of the Congo. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 93(5), 990993.Google Scholar
Drali, R., Abi-Rached, L., Boutellis, A., Djossou, F., Barker, S. C., & Raoult, D. (2016). Host switching of human lice to new world monkeys in South America. Infection, Genetics and Evolution, 39, 225231.Google Scholar
Durden, L. A. (2019). Lice (Phthiraptera). In Mullen, G. R., & Durden, L. A., eds., Medical and Veterinary Entomology. 3rd ed., London: Academic Press, 79106.Google Scholar
Durden, L. A., & Musser, G. G. (1994). The mammalian hosts of the sucking lice (Anoplura) of the world: a host-parasite list. Bulletin of the Society for Vector Ecology, 19(2), 130168.Google Scholar
Eley, R. M., Strum, S. C., Muchemi, G., & Reid, G. D. F. (1989). Nutrition, body condition, activity patterns, and parasitism of free-ranging troops of olive baboons (Papio anubis) in Kenya. American Journal of Primatology, 18(3), 209219.Google Scholar
Emerson, K. C., & Price, R. (1975). Mallophaga of Venezuelan mammals. Brigham Young University Science Bulletin, Biological Series, 20(3), 177.Google Scholar
Ewing, H. E. (1926). A revision of the American lice of the genus Pediculus, together with a consideration of their geographical and host distribution. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 68(2620), 133.Google Scholar
Ewing, H. E. (1938). The sucking lice of American monkeys. The Journal of Parasitology, 24(1), 1333.Google Scholar
Ferris, G. F. (1951). The sucking lice. Memoirs of the Pacific Coast Entomological Society, 1, 1130.Google Scholar
Forster, P. (2004). Ice Ages and the mitochondrial DNA chronology of human dispersals: a review. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences, 359(1442), 255264.Google Scholar
Groves, C. (2001). Primate Taxonomy. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Hafner, M. S., Sudman, P. D., Villablanca, F. X., Spradling, T. A., Demastes, J. W., & Nadler, S. A. (1994). Disparate rates of molecular evolution in cospeciating hosts and parasites. Science, 265(5175), 10871090.Google Scholar
Hill, K., & Hawkes, K. (1983). Neotropical Hunting among the Aché of Eastern Paraguay. In Hames, R. B., & Vickers, W. T., eds., Adaptive Responses of Native Amazonians. New York: Academic Press,139188.Google Scholar
Hinman, E. H. (1931). Pediculus (Parapediculus) atelophilus Ewing 1926 from the red spider monkey, Ateles geoffroyi. Parasitology, 23(4), 488491.Google Scholar
Hopkins, G. H. E. (1949). The host-associations of the lice of mammals. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 119(2), 387604.Google Scholar
Horwich, R. H. (1998). Effective solutions for howler conservation. International Journal of Primatology, 19(3), 579598.Google Scholar
Houhamdi, L., Lepidi, H., Drancourt, M., & Raoult, D. (2006). Experimental model to evaluate the human body louse as a vector of plague. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 194(11), 15891596.Google Scholar
Johnson, K. P., & Clayton, D. H. (2004). Untangling coevolutionary history. Systematic Biology, 53(1), 9294.Google Scholar
Johnson, K. P., Adams, R. J., Page, R. D. M., & Clayton, D. H. (2003). When do parasites fail to speciate in response to host speciation? Systematic Biology, 52(1), 3747.Google Scholar
Karesh, W. B., Wallace, R. B., Painter, R. L. E., et al. (1998). Immobilization and health assessment of free-ranging black spider monkeys (Ateles paniscus chamek). American Journal of Primatology, 44(2), 107123.Google Scholar
Kim, K. C., & Ludwig, H. W. (1978). The family classification of the Anoplura. Systematic Entomology, 3(3), 249284.Google Scholar
Kitchen, A., Miyamoto, M. M., & Mulligan, C. J. (2008). A three-stage colonization model for the peopling of the Americas. PLoS ONE, 3(2), e1596.Google Scholar
Kowalewski, M. M. (2007). Patterns of affiliation and cooperation in Howler Monkeys: An alternative model to explain social organization in non-human primates. PhD dissertation, University of Illinois.Google Scholar
Kowalewski, M. M., & Garber, P. A. (2015). Solving the collective action problem during intergroup encounters: the case of black and gold howler monkeys (Alouatta caraya). In Kowalewski, M. M., Garber, P. A., Cortés-Ortiz, L., Urbani, B., & Youlatos, D., eds., Howler Monkeys: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation. New York: Springer,165189.Google Scholar
Kowalewski, M., & Zunino, G. E. (2004). Birth seasonality in Alouatta caraya in Northern Argentina. International Journal of Primatology, 25(2), 383400.Google Scholar
Kowalewski, M. M., Pavé, R., Fernández, V. A., Raño, M., & Zunino, G. E. (2019). Life-history traits and group dynamic in black and gold howler monkeys in flooded forests of Northern Argentina. In Barnett, A. A., Matsuda, I., & Nowak, K., eds., Primates in Flooded Habitats: Ecology and Conservation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 263269.Google Scholar
Light, J. E., & Reed, D. L. (2009). Multigene analysis of phylogenetic relationships and divergence times of primate sucking lice (Phthiraptera: Anoplura). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 50(2), 376390.Google Scholar
Light, J. E., Toups, M. A., & Reed, D. L. (2008). What’s in a name: The taxonomic status of human head and body lice. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 47(3), 12031216.Google Scholar
Light, J. E., Smith, V. S., Allen, J. M., Durden, L. A., & Reed, D. L. (2010). Evolutionary history of mammalian sucking lice (Phthiraptera: Anoplura). BMC Evolutionary Biology, 10(1), 292.Google Scholar
Linz, B., Balloux, F., Moodley, Y., et al. (2007). An African origin for the intimate association between humans and Helicobacter pylori. Nature, 445(7130), 915918.Google Scholar
Lizarralde, M. (2002). Ethnoecology of monkeys among the Barí of Venezuela: perception, use and conservation. In Fuentes, A., & Wolfe, L. D., eds., Primates Face to Face: The Conservation Implications of Human-Nonhuman Primate Interconnections,. 85–100.Google Scholar
Marsh, L. K. (2003). The nature of fragmentation. In Marsh, L. K., ed., Primates in Fragments: Ecology and Conservation, Boston: Springer, 110.Google Scholar
Maunder, J. W. (1983). The appreciation of lice. Proceedings of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, 55, 131.Google Scholar
Mumcuoglu, K. Y., Galun, R., Kaminchik, Y., Panet, A., & Levanon, A. (1996). Antihemostatic activity in salivary glands of the human body louse, Pediculus humanus humanus (Anoplura: Pediculidae). Journal of Insect Physiology, 42(11), 10831087.Google Scholar
Nascimento, R. M. do, Maturano, R., Oliveira, M. de, & Daemon, E. (2018). First record of Cebidicola semiarmatus (Phthiraptera: Trichodectidae) on the red howler monkey, Alouatta guariba clamintans (Primate: Atelidae) in Brazil. Revista Colombiana de Entomología, 44(1), 129131.Google Scholar
Page, R. D. M. (1993). Parasites, phylogeny and cospeciation. International Journal for Parasitology, 23(4), 499506.Google Scholar
Piarroux, R., Abedi, A. A., Shako, J. C., et al. (2013). Plague epidemics and lice, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 19(3), 505506.Google Scholar
Pope, B. L. (1966). Some parasites of the howler monkey of Northern Argentina. The Journal of Parasitology, 52(1), 166168.Google Scholar
Potter, B. A., Baichtal, J. F., Beaudoin, A. B., et al. (2018). Current evidence allows multiple models for the peopling of the Americas. Science Advances, 4(8), eaat5473.Google Scholar
Price, R. D., Hellenthal, R. A., Palma, R. I., Johnson, K. P., & Clayton, D. H. (2003). The Chewing Lice: Word Checklist and Biological Overview. Illinois Natural History Survey Special Publication.Google Scholar
Raño, M. (2016). Reproductive strategies of female black and golden howler monkeys (Alouatta caraya) in Northeast Argentina. University of Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Raoult, D., & Roux, V. (1999). the body louse as a vector of reemerging human diseases. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 29(4), 888911.Google Scholar
Raoult, D., Reed, D. L., Dittmar, K., et al. (2008). Molecular identification of lice from Pre-Columbian mummies. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 197(4), 535543.Google Scholar
Reed, D. L., & Hafner, M. S. (1997). Host specificity of chewing lice on pocket gophers: A potential mechanism for cospeciation. Journal of Mammalogy, 78(2), 655660.Google Scholar
Reed, D. L., Smith, V. S., Hammond, S. L., Rogers, A. R., & Clayton, D. H. (2004). Genetic analysis of lice supports direct contact between modern and archaic humans. PLoS Biology, 2(11), e340.Google Scholar
Reed, D. L., Light, J. E., Allen, J. M., & Kirchman, J. J. (2007). Pair of lice lost or parasites regained: the evolutionary history of anthropoid primate lice. BMC Biology, 5(1), 7.Google Scholar
Reed, D. L., Allen, J. M., Toups, M. A., Boyd, B. M., & Ascunce, M. S. (2015). The study of primate evolution from a lousy perspective. In Krasnov, B. R., Littlewood, D. T. J., & Morand, S., eds., Parasite Diversity and Diversification: Evolutionary Ecology Meets Phylogenetics, 202–214.Google Scholar
Ricklefs, R. E., Fallon, S. M., & Bermingham, E. (2004). Evolutionary relationships, cospeciation, and host switching in avian malaria parasites. Systematic Biology, 53(1), 111119.Google Scholar
Rival, L. (1993). The growth of family trees: Understanding Huaorani perceptions of the forest. Man, 28(4), 635652.Google Scholar
Rival, L. (2006). Amazonian historical ecologies. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 12, S79S94.Google Scholar
Rylands, A. B., & Rodriguez-Luna, E. (2000). An assessment of the diversity of New World primates. Neotropical Primates, 8(2), 6193.Google Scholar
Rylands, A. B., Mittermeier, R. A., & Rodriguez-Luna, E. (1995). A species list for the New World primates (Platyrrhini): Distribution by country, endemism, and conservation status according to the Mace-Land system. Neotropical Primates, 3, 113160.Google Scholar
Sánchez-Villagra, M. R., Pope, T. R., & Salas, V. (1998). Relation of intergroup variation in allogrooming to group social structure and ectoparasite loads in red howlers (Alouatta seniculus). International Journal of Primatology, 19(3), 473491.Google Scholar
Santa Cruz, A. C. M., Borda, J. T., Patiño, E. M., Gomez, L., & Zunino, G. E. (2000). Habitat fragmentation and parasitism in howler monkeys (Alouatta caraya). Neotropical Primates, 8(4), 146148.Google Scholar
Schurr, T. G., & Sherry, S. T. (2004). Mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosome diversity and the peopling of the Americas: Evolutionary and demographic evidence. American Journal of Human Biology, 16(4), 420439.Google Scholar
Shepard, G. H. (2002). Primates in Matsigenka subsistence and world view. In Fuentes, A., & Wolfe, L. D., eds., Primates Face to Face: The Conservation Implications of Human-nonhuman Primate Interconnections. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 101136.Google Scholar
Smole, W. J. (1976). The Yanoama Indians. A Cultural Geography. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Souza Junior, J. C. (2007). Perfil sanitário de bugios ruivos, Alouatta guariba clamitans (Cabrera, 1940) (Primates: Atelidae): um estudo com animais recepcionados e mantidos em perímetro urbano no município de Indaial, Santa Catarina – Brazil. Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina.Google Scholar
Stafford, E. W. (1943). Some Venezuelan Mallophaga. Boletin de Entomologia Venezolana, 2, 3558.Google Scholar
Štefka, J., Hoeck, P. E., Keller, L. F., & Smith, V. S. (2011). A hitchhikers guide to the Galápagos: co-phylogeography of Galápagos mockingbirds and their parasites. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 11(1), 284.Google Scholar
Takano-lee, M., Yoon, K. S., Edman, J. D., Mullens, B. A., & Clark, J. M. (2003). In vivo and in vitro rearing of Pediculus humanus capitis (Anoplura: Pediculidae). Journal of Medical Entomology, 40(5), 628635.Google Scholar
Toups, M. A., Kitchen, A., Light, J. E., & Reed, D. L. (2011). Origin of clothing lice indicates early clothing use by anatomically modern humans in Africa. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 28(1), 2932.Google Scholar
Urbani, B., & Cormier, L. A. (2015). The ethnoprimatology of the howler monkeys (Alouatta spp.): From past to present. In Kowalewski, M. M., Garber, P. A., Cortés-Ortiz, L., Urbani, B., & Youlatos, D., eds., Howler Monkeys: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation. New York: Springer, 259280.Google Scholar
Vienne, D. M. de, Refrégier, G., López‐Villavicencio, M., Tellier, A., Hood, M. E., & Giraud, T. (2013). Cospeciation vs host-shift speciation: methods for testing, evidence from natural associations and relation to coevolution. New Phytologist, 198(2), 347385.Google Scholar
Volf, P. (1994). Localization of the major immunogen and other glycoproteins of the louse Polyplax spinulosa. International Journal for Parasitology, 24(7), 10051010.Google Scholar
Wall, R., & Shearer, D. (1997). Lice (Phthiraptera). In Wall, R., & Shearer, D., eds., Veterinary Entomology: Arthropod Ectoparasites of Veterinary Importance. Dordrecht: Springer, 284312.Google Scholar
Wall, R., & Shearer, D. (2001). Veterinary Ectoparasites: Biology, Pathology and Control, 2nd ed. Oxford: Blackwell Science.Google Scholar
Waniek, P. J. (2009). The digestive system of human lice: current advances and potential applications. Physiological Entomology, 34(3), 203210.Google Scholar
Werneck, F. (1950). Os malófagos de mamíferos. Parte II: Ischnocera (continuacao Thichodectidae) e Rhyncophthirina. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz.Google Scholar
Whiteman, N. K., & Parker, P. G. (2005). Using parasites to infer host population history: a new rationale for parasite conservation. Animal Conservation, 8(2), 175181.Google Scholar
Zunino, G. E., Gonzalez, V., Kowalewski, M., & Bravo, S. P. (2001). Alouatta caraya: Relations among habitat, density and social organization. Primate Report, 61, 3746.Google Scholar
Zuo, X.-H., Guo, X.-G., Zhan, Y.-Z., et al. (2011). Host selection and niche differentiation in sucking lice (Insecta: Anoplura) among small mammals in southwestern China. Parasitology Research, 108(5), 12431251.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×