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Material Composition of Greenstone Acquisition and Use in the Jovel Valley, Chiapas, Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2025

Jennifer L. Meanwell
Affiliation:
Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA, 02139. USA
Elizabeth H. Paris*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology and Archaeology, University of Calgary. 2500 University Drive NW, ES 620, Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada
Roberto López Bravo
Affiliation:
Licenciatura en Arqueología, Facultad de Humanidades, Universidad de Ciencias y Artes de Chiapas, Antiguo Camino a San Gabriel s/n, C.P. 29160, Chiapa de Corzo, Chiapas, Mexico.
*
Corresponding author: Elizabeth H. Paris; Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Greenstone is commonly used to produce culturally significant items across Mesoamerica, including axes, earspools, figurines, and beads. This research characterizes the mineralogy of greenstone materials recovered from sites in the Jovel Valley, Chiapas, Mexico, to document the range of green minerals utilized by the inhabitants. Our analysis of the objects suggests that the Late Classic and Early Postclassic Maya of the Jovel Valley had access to a variety of greenstone minerals, including serpentinites, green micas, grossular, and jadeite. X-ray diffraction and X-ray fluorescence spectrometry characterization of reference materials suggests procurement of greenstone resources from the well-documented sources of the Motagua–Polochic Fault Zone, and also potentially from sources in the Chalchihuitán–Chenalhó area of Chiapas, Mexico. The Jovel Valley had access to materials over long distances through historically documented trade routes that allowed the movement of greenstone materials west from the Motagua River Valley into highland Chiapas or south from the Chalchihuitán–Chenalhó area.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0), which permits re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that no alterations are made and the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press

For the ancient Maya, green represented the color of life; the color of ripe vegetation; the color of water in rivers and lakes; the color of unripe corn; the color of the resplendent quetzal; the color whose very name “yax” meant “precious” (Houston et al. Reference Houston, Brittenham, Mesick, Tokovinine and Warinner2009; Pendergast Reference Pendergast1998). From the Early Formative period and beyond, we see archaeological evidence for the use of greenstone as a precious material at Maya sites (Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977:41), and also more broadly throughout the early Mesoamerican world (Diehl Reference Diehl2005; Garber et al. Reference Garber, Grove, Hirth, Hoopes and Lange1993; Ortiz and Rodríguez Reference Ortiz and del Carmen Rodríguez2000). Greenstone was used to produce culturally significant items such as beads, figurines, earspools, and other personal adornments, although in rare instances it was also used to create sculptures and monuments, such as the serpentine pavements of Middle Formative period La Venta (Clark and Coleman Reference Clark and Colman2014; Drucker et al. Reference Drucker, Heizer and Squier1959), or the carved jade sculpture of Sun God's head at Classic period Altun Ha (Pendergast Reference Pendergast1982). These items were often used for wealth accumulation, adornment, status symbols, and precious offerings in caches and funerary contexts (Kovacevich and Callaghan Reference Kovacevich and Callaghan2019).

Many green minerals and rocks were used in Mesoamerica to make objects and ornaments; for this reason, many Mesoamericanists use the terms “greenstone” or “social jade” rather than “jade” (Powis et al. Reference Powis, Horn III, Iannone, Healy, Garber, Awe, Skaggs and Howie2016; Tremain Reference Tremain2014). The majority of jade deposits are highly heterogeneous and are frequently associated with other minerals, many of which are also green in color (Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Sayre, van Zelst and van Zelst1985; Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Lange, Hoopes and Lange1993a, Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Sayre, Mishara, Hoopes and Lange1993b). Many scholars have noted cultural preferences for certain colors and characteristics concerning the social value of different greenstones, including Olmec preferences for blue-green hues and Late Classic period Maya rulers’ preferences for apple-green colors (Seitz et al. Reference Seitz, Harlow, Sisson and Taube2001; Taube et al. Reference Taube, Sisson, Seitz, Harlow and Taube.2004). Pendergast (Reference Pendergast1998:4) argues that some utilitarian items, such as woodworking axes, favored dark greenish-black materials.

In this paper, we present the analysis of greenstone artifacts recovered from Late Classic to Early Postclassic sites in the Jovel Valley, Chiapas, Mexico. These objects were excavated during the “Proyecto Económico de los Altos de Chiapas” and “Proyecto Interacción Entre Reinos en los Altos de Chiapas,” both directed by Dr. Elizabeth Paris and Dr. Roberto López Bravo, and were exported to MIT with permission from the Consejo de Arqueología del INAH, Mexico. We present new mineralogical and compositional analysis of these artifacts using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF), and our findings indicate that Jovel Valley residents were utilizing a wide variety of greenstones, including both jadeites and “social jades” in both everyday and ritual practice. We also characterize the mineralogy of comparative greenstone samples from sources in highland Guatemala and highland Chiapas attributed to the Chalchihuitán area to evaluate the range of greenstone materials available at Jovel Valley sites, and hopefully provide comparative data for further investigations. Our results indicate that Jovel Valley residents used a wide variety of valuable green minerals in addition to jadeites, including micaceous stones, quartz, albite, and serpentinite.

Background

Known greenstone deposits in Mesoamerica

Mineralogists recognize two minerals, one amphibole and one pyroxene, as true “jade.” The amphibole jade, called nephrite, is not present in Mesoamerican geological deposits, and has not been identified to date in any of the known Mesoamerican sources (Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977:41). Jadeite is a pyroxene group mineral, and is often found in solid solution with other pyroxene group minerals. Pyroxene-based jades are traditionally classified according to the relative proportions of their three principal components: jadeite (NaAlSi2O6), diopside (CaMgSi2O6) and aegirine (NaFe+3Si2O6). Rocks that consist almost entirely of jadeite are called jadeitite (with less than 20 percent diopside+aegirine), while a solid solution of jadeite and diopside with less than 20 percent aegirine is called “omphacite jade.” Chloromelanite is a type of iron-rich jade with more than 20 percent aegirine (Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977:41), and often ranges in color from dark green to black (Foshag Reference Foshag1957:23). More recently, Franz and others (Reference Franz, Sun, Hänni, De Capitani, Thanasuthipitak, Atichat, Sun, Hänni and De Capitani2014) have proposed a new system of classification for jades, with the three principal minerals jadeite, diopside, and kosmochlor (NaCrSi2O6). Complicating geological sourcing, jadeite is commonly found near associated minerals that can also have a green color, such as serpentinite, kosmochlor, and clinoamphiboles.

The best-known deposits of jadeite in Mesoamerica are located in the Motagua River Valley in Guatemala (Figure 1); these are thought to have provided most of the jadeite artifacts from Mesoamerican sites, although specific source locations are often a closely guarded secret (Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977). The Motagua–Polochic Fault System extends over 200 km along the Motagua River from its tributaries in the western Guatemalan highlands, east to Lake Izabal, with a range of jadeite and serpentinite-bearing locations to both north and south of the river (Gendron et al. Reference Gendron, Smith and Gendron-Badou2002; Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011; Mora et al. Reference Mora, Jaimes-Viera, Garduño-Monroy, Layer, Pompa-Mera and Godinez2007; Smith Reference Smith, Edwards and Chalmers2005). Many of the explored jadeite deposits are concentrated on the north bank in the region surrounding San Agustín Acasaguastlán and San Cristóbal Acasaguastlán (Becquelin and Bosc Reference Becquelin and Bosc1973; Bosc Reference Bosc1971; Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Lange, Hoopes and Lange1993; Taube et al. Reference Taube, Sisson, Seitz, Harlow and Taube.2004), along the western edge of the Sierra de las Minas range. On the south bank, explorations have been concentrated in the Río El Tambor district between Carrizal Grande and La Ensenada (Gendron et al. Reference Gendron, Smith and Gendron-Badou2002; Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Lange, Hoopes and Lange1993; Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011). Realistically, jadeite and other associated raw materials likely came from several different sources in the Upper and Middle Motagua regions of Guatemala (Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011; Hruby Reference Hruby, Houston, Newman, Román and Garrison2015; Rochette Reference Rochette2009; Taube and Ishihara-Brito Reference Taube, Ishihara-Brito, Pillsbury, Doutriaux, Ishihara-Brito and Tokovinine2012:138–140). Within the Motagua–Polochic Fault System jadeite occurs in small areas, typically extending no more than a few hundred meters, commonly distributed as boulders and cobbles of a dismembered larger body sitting on (and in) serpentinite, where they are identified and mined from near-surface deposits (Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:366).

Figure 1. Map of Mesoamerica with sites and greenstone-bearing areas described in the text. Sites emphasized in the text are highlighted in red. Drafted by Elizabeth Paris, from base map by Wikimedia Commons (Sémhur / Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY-4.0), with reference to Powis et al. Reference Powis, Horn III, Iannone, Healy, Garber, Awe, Skaggs and Howie2016:Figure 2.

The metamorphic deposits of the Motagua–Polochic Fault System are geologically diverse, where jadeite formed in association with other green minerals. Muscovite ((K2Al4[Si6Al2O20])(OH, F)4) is a potassium-rich mica, and can be pale green with a flaky, foliated habit; paragonite (NaAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2) has a similar structure, with sodium in place of potassium (see also Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:369). Paragonite is characteristic of metamorphic zones with schists and eclogites, which is a geology similar to zones where jadeite tends to form. Ephesite (NaLiAl2(Si2Al2)O10(OH)2) is a rare mica that is typically associated with chlorite, muscovite, and corundite (Smith Reference Smith1851). Other green minerals include chlorite (Mg, Al, Fe)12[(SiAl)8O20](OH)16); soapstone (Mg6[Si8O20](OH)4); serpentine (Mg6[Si4O10](OH)8) and other minerals in the serpentine subgroup; albite (NaAlSi3O8); green chalcedony (SiO2); and green marble (metamorphosed limestone (CaCO3) or dolomite (CaMg(CO3)2) (Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977:41). Another mineral that may be green is olivine, a ferric silicate rich in magnesium ((Mg2+, Fe2+)2SiO4) that weathers rapidly at the surface, and the broader olivine group that includes tephroite (Mn2Si O4), monticellite (CaMgSiO4) and kirschsteinite (CaFeSiO4). The Motagua–Polochic Fault System deposits also contains grossular (Ca3Al2[SiO4]3), a rare, green variety of garnet, which occurs both north of the fault, and also south of it in the region around La Ensenada (Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:376).

Harlow and others (Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:365) argue that there are some significant differences between the geologies of the north and south sides of the Motagua–Polochic Fault. To the north the serpentinite deposits contain a variety of minerals including garnet amphibolite, omphacite-taramite metabasite, jadeitite, albitite, and altered clinozoisite-amphibole-eclogite on the western edge; while to the south, assemblages feature lawsonite, eclogite, blueschist, and jadeitite (see also Becquelin and Bosc Reference Becquelin and Bosc1973; Gendron et al. Reference Gendron, Smith and Gendron-Badou2002; Smith Reference Smith, Edwards and Chalmers2005). Greenstone in the deposits north of the Motagua Fault predominantly features paragonite mica, while deposits to the south lack paragonite and contain abundant muscovite deposits (Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:384). Finally, Harlow and others (Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:380–381) argue that none of the jadeitites to the north of the Motagua Fault contain quartz, either as inclusions in jadeite or in veins, but all contain albite, mica, and usually analcime; jadeites from south of the Motagua Fault, in contrast, frequently present quartz inclusions in jadeitite.

Several other regions in Mesoamerica bear slightly different ranges of metamorphic geological materials that appear green, many of which were exploited in pre-Columbian times; however, they are not known to contain jadeite (Figure 1). The Acatlán Complex extends across areas centered principally within the modern state of Guerrero. As observed also in the Motagua–Polochic Fault System, many of these deposits include grossular (Ca3Al2[SiO4]3), which is also relatively common in northern Mexico. Powis and others (Reference Powis, Horn III, Iannone, Healy, Garber, Awe, Skaggs and Howie2016:69) suggest that some of the basalts and kyanite-bearing metamorphic triangulate stones found at Middle Preclassic sites in Belize can be attributed to the Acatlán Complex. Serpentinite (antigorite) deposits have been identified at the Tehuitzingo quarry in southern Puebla, and Cuicatlan quarry in northwest Oaxaca, supplying some of the celts recovered from the Olmec sites of La Merced and La Venta (Jaime-Riverón et al. Reference Jaime-Riverón, Castilleros, Calligaro and Ocampo2009). Smith and Gendron (Reference Smith and Gendron1997) also document the use of eclogite in greenstone axes at Cozumel Island, eclogite being a rare, dense high-P metamorphic rock composed largely of red [pyrope + almandine]-rich garnet and green [jadeite + diopside]-rich clinopyroxene, but in which other minerals may be extremely variable in quantity and in chemical composition; they note that eclogite minerals are present in both the Motagua–Polochic Fault System and the Acatlán Complex. The Maya Mountains of central Belize (Bladen Formation) also contain kyanite-bearing schists and other medium- to high-grade metamorphic rocks including dark-green metamorphosed basalts comprised principally of chlorite (ClO2; Powis et al. Reference Powis, Horn III, Iannone, Healy, Garber, Awe, Skaggs and Howie2016:63).

Other minerals that exhibit green or blue coloring, which can be detected due to the presence of copper, include malachite (Cu2(CO3)(OH)2), azurite (Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2), veszelyite ((Cu,Zn) 2ZnPO4(OH)3•2(H2O)) and turquoise (CuAl₆(PO₄)4(OH)₈ • 4H₂O). While the principal sources of copper ores are located in West and Central Mexico (Hosler Reference Hosler1994), small pockets of malachite, azurite, and chalcopyrite are located at several locations in the Maya area, including the western Teapa Valley (Santa Fe mine area) of southern Tabasco (Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b), Las Chicharras (Pacific Coastal Chiapas; González Cruz Reference González Cruz2011:206) as well as some locations in Guatemala in a west–east band along the northern edge of the Cuchumatanes and Sierra Madre mountain ranges (Weeks Reference Weeks, Simmons and Shugar2013:121). To date, the only Maya site with published evidence for pre-Hispanic copper ore processing and smelting is that of El Coyote in Honduras (Urban et al. Reference Urban, Shugar, Richardson, Schortman, Simmons and Shugar2013), with evidence of copper remelting and casting at Late Postclassic cities such as K'umarkaj (Utatlán; Weeks Reference Weeks, Simmons and Shugar2013), Mayapan (Meanwell et al. Reference Meanwell, Paris, Alvarado and Lope2013; Meanwell et al. Reference Meanwell, Paris, Lope, Seymour and Masic2020; Paris Reference Paris2008; Paris et al. Reference Paris, Baquedano, Lope, Masson, Kennett, Serafin and Meanwell2022) and Lamanai (Simmons et al. Reference Simmons, Pendergast and Graham2009; Simmons and Shugar Reference Simmons, Shugar, Simmons and Shugar2013a, Reference Simmons and Shugar2013b). However, copper-based minerals such as malachite were occasionally used for funerary masks (González Cruz Reference González Cruz2011; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Casanova-González, Mitrani, González-Cruz, Cuevas-García and Ruvalcaba-Sil2020a) and pigments used on murals and ceramic vessels (Cheung et al. Reference Cheung, Xie, Yao, Fischer, Muros, Prikhodko, Kakoulli, Houston, Newman, Román and Garrison2015; Houston et al. Reference Houston, Brittenham, Mesick, Tokovinine and Warinner2009; Hurst Reference Hurst2009; Magaloni et al. Reference Magaloni, Newman, Balos, Castano, Pancella and Fruh1995; Miller et al. Reference Miller, Brittenham, Hurst and Ashby2013).

The cultural importance of greenstone in Ancient Mesoamerica

Greenstone objects have a very long history as precious objects in Mesoamerica. The use of greenstone offerings, including celt caches, dates back to the Early Formative period Olmec sites such as San Lorenzo and El Manatí (Clark and Coleman Reference Clark and Colman2014; Jaime-Riverón Reference Jaime-Riverón2010; Ortiz and Rodríguez Reference Ortiz and del Carmen Rodríguez2000), and proliferated through early political centers of southeastern Mesoamerica including La Venta (Clark and Coleman Reference Clark and Colman2014; Diehl Reference Diehl2005; Drucker et al. Reference Drucker, Heizer and Squier1959), Chiapa de Corzo (Bachand Reference Bachand2013; Gallaga Murrieta and Lowe Reference Gallaga Murrieta and Lowe2018), Cascajal (Englehardt et al. Reference Englehardt, Insaurralde Caballero, Melgar Tísoc, Velázquez Maldonado, Torres, Bernard and Carrasco2020); Aguada Fénix (Inomata et al. Reference Inomata, Triadan, Vázquez López, Fernandez-Diaz, Omori, Bauer, Hernández, Beach, Cagnato and Aoyama2020), Ceibal (Inomata et al. Reference Inomata, Triadan, Aoyama, Castillo and Yonenobu2013), the Belize Valley (Powis et al. Reference Powis, Horn III, Iannone, Healy, Garber, Awe, Skaggs and Howie2016) and many others, including monumental serpentine pavements and celt caches. Meanwhile, at small Middle Formative villages, jade beads were incorporated into the material culture of ordinary households as personal ornaments and funerary objects (Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977:41, 1991). Greenstone beads were often placed in the mouth of deceased individuals, a practice linked to the cycle of death and rebirth (Hammond Reference Hammond1991; Hruby Reference Hruby, Houston, Newman, Román and Garrison2015). From the Late Formative through the Classic period, they were increasingly incorporated into dedicatory caches and the royal regalia of dynastic rulers, which ranged from beads, pectorals, earspools, and carved plaques to elaborate diadems, carved sculptures, and funerary masks (Aguilar-Melo et al. Reference Aguilar-Melo, Mitrani, Casanova-Gonzalez, Manrique-Ortega, Pérez-Ireta, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Tovalin-Ahumada, Moscoso-Rincón, Sesheña-Hernández and Lozada-Toledo2019; Filoy Nadal Reference Filoy Nadal2010; Freidel et al. Reference Freidel, Reese-Taylor, Mora-Marín, Masson and Freidel2002; González Cruz Reference González Cruz2011; Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977:41; Juárez-Rodríguez et al. Reference Juárez-Rodríguez, Argote-Espino, Santos-Ramírez and López-García2018; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Casanova-González, Mitrani, González-Cruz, Cuevas-García and Ruvalcaba-Sil2020a; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b). By Spanish Contact, greenstone beads were commonly used as currency items (Landa and Gaspar Antonio Chi [1581] in Tozzer Reference Tozzer1941:94–96, 231) and objects forming part of imperial tax payments (Berdan and Anawalt Reference Berdan and Anawalt1992) as well as personal ornaments and ritual objects, with the former practice potentially dating back to the Late Formative period in the Maya Lowlands (Freidel et al. Reference Freidel, Reese-Taylor, Mora-Marín, Masson and Freidel2002). Masson and Freidel (Reference Masson and Freidel2012:476) suggest that greenstone objects formed a continuum of value from small beads to polished jade celts, where items such as beads and serpentine axes were accessible to households across the socioeconomic spectrum (see also Freidel and Reilly Reference Freidel, Kent Reilly, Staller and Carrasco2010; Lesure Reference Lesure and Robb1999). Greenstone beads and objects were frequently given to the Spanish during attempts at early diplomatic relations (see summary in Foshag Reference Foshag1957:10–11).

Jade objects were produced through extensive carving, drilling and polishing techniques (Hruby Reference Hruby, Houston, Newman, Román and Garrison2015; Kovacevich Reference Kovacevich2006, Reference Kovacevich2013; Kovacevich and Callaghan Reference Kovacevich and Callaghan2019; Pendergast Reference Pendergast1998; Rochette Reference Rochette2009). Evidence for concentrated lapidary productive activities has been identified through the presence of production debitage such as percussion flakes, sawn fragments, blanks, and tools such as abrader/polishers (Kovacevich Reference Kovacevich2006; Kovacevich and Callaghan Reference Kovacevich and Callaghan2019; Rochette Reference Rochette2009). These items are present at multiple sites in the Middle Motagua Valley in the San Agustín Acasaguastlán area (Smith and Kidder Reference Smith and Kidder1943; Rochette Reference Rochette2009) as well as at the site of Cancuen, a monumental zone strategically situated along the important south–north trade corridor that included the Río Pasión (Andrieu et al. Reference Andrieu, Rodas and Luin2014; Kovacevich Reference Kovacevich2006).

By the Late Postclassic period, greenstone was called chalchihuitl by Nahuatl-speaking peoples (Berdan and Anawalt Reference Berdan and Anawalt1992; Melgar Tísoc et al. Reference Tísoc, Ricardo, Ciriaco and Desruelles2018), specified as being the property of nobles, with particularly fine examples bearing the name of quetzalitztli (Sahagún Reference Sahagún1963, Book 11:221–223). Book 11 of the Florentine Codex also lists a number of related stones, including quetzalitzepyollotli (a type of greenish-white jade; highly esteemed), tlilayotic chalchihuitl (greenish black; very expensive), iztac chalchihuitl (white jade with green and light-blue spots), and mixtecatetl (a mixture of white, black, and green, not esteemed; “the last of the green stones”) suggesting that the Aztecs had an extremely strong understanding of the range of color variation in jadeite and related minerals, which they ranked in value according to their characteristics (Sahagún Reference Sahagún1963, Book 11:226). Book 9 of the Florentine Codex lists chalchihuitl and quetzalitztli as high-value commodities traded by the pochteca from the time of the second ruler, Tlacateotl, together with quetzal feathers, also a Maya highland product (Sahagún Reference Sahagún1959, Book 9:1). Some of the greenstone obtained by the Aztec Empire was likely from the Gulf Coast, obtained through the trading missions of vanguard merchants to the Gulf Coast. These missions are described in some detail, mentioning that the Aztec merchants specifically visited the cities of Xicalanco, Cimatlan [Cimatán] and Coatzaqualco, and the rulers who governed them, and received “the large green stones, round, green, like tomatoes; the cylindrical green stones; then the green stones cut on a bias; the well-colored precious green stone which we call today the finest emerald-green jade; and fine bottle-green jadeite, and turquoise mosaic shields, and stones with green pyrites in their midst” (Sahagún Reference Sahagún1959, Book 9:19). Other greenstone objects were obtained directly from outlying provinces through tax/tribute payments. Chalchihuitl was among the goods taken in tax payments from the imperial provinces of Soconusco (Pacific Coastal Chiapas) as well as a number of other provinces with which greenstone was exchanged including areas within the present states of Puebla, Guerrero, Oaxaca, and Veracruz (Berdan and Anawalt Reference Berdan and Anawalt1992; Nuttall Reference Nuttall1901:229; Smith Reference Smith, Berdan, Blanton, Boone, Hodge, Smith and Umberger1996:147). Additionally, Carmack (Reference Carmack1981:142) suggests that the highland Guatemalan Maya political capital of K'umarkaj (Utatlán) formed a tributary relationship and marriage alliance with the Aztec Empire in 1510, where the rulers of K'umarkaj paid the Mexica in quetzal feathers, gold, precious stones (likely jade), cacao, and cloth. Notably, as Taube and colleagues (Reference Taube, Sisson, Seitz, Harlow and Taube.2004:205) observe, both the traded pieces from Xicalanco and the taxed goods from the provinces represent finished carved objects, mostly beads and plaques, rather than freshly quarried material. However, a small number of partially worked jade plaques and mosaic pieces recovered from the Templo Mayor (Melgar Tísoc et al. Reference Tísoc, Ricardo, Ciriaco and Desruelles2018) suggest that some jade ornaments were exchanged as preforms, blanks, or nodules, and worked into their final form in cities such as Tenochtitlan, as described in historical accounts of skilled lapidaries by Sahagún (Reference Sahagún1959:80–81).

The potential for greenstone sources in highland Chiapas

As early as 1901, Zelia Nuttall hypothesized that jadeite sources could be located in highland Chiapas (Reference Nuttall1901:228–229). She noted that the Florentine Codex describes the native prospecting and mining of jade in its natural setting in significant detail (Sahagún Reference Sahagún1963, Book 11:221–222), and noted the significance of the name of the modern/historic Chiapas town of Chalchihuitán, a Nahuatl toponym that translates as “The Land of Chalchihuitl [greenstone]” (Nuttall Reference Nuttall1901:232). Recently, Taladoire (Reference Taladoire2016:15) reports several personal communications with scholars hypothesizing possible sources in this area. He notes the relative scarcity of jadeite objects at Tonina compared to Palenque, Yaxchilan, and Cancuen, hypothesizing the latter sites had greater access to Motagua jade via trade along the Usumacinta River, prompting Tonina to seek greenstone resources within the western Chiapas highlands (Taladoire Reference Taladoire2016:15).

The modern town of Chalchihuitán sits within a broader regional system of left-lateral reverse and strike-slip faults known as Chiapas Fold and Thrust Belt, which runs roughly parallel to the Motagua–Polochic Fault System (Hernández-Vergara et al. Reference Hernández-Vergara, Fitz Diaz, Brocard, Morán-Zenteno, Davidson, Hull and Pindell2021; Mora et al. Reference Mora, Jaimes-Viera, Garduño-Monroy, Layer, Pompa-Mera and Godinez2007). This regional fault system extends from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec into central and northwest Chiapas, and is responsible for the creation of the Chiapanecan Volcanic Arc that punctuates the Central Highlands as far as El Chichonal Volcano in northwest Chiapas (Hernández-Vergara et al. Reference Hernández-Vergara, Fitz Diaz, Brocard, Morán-Zenteno, Davidson, Hull and Pindell2021; Mora et al. Reference Mora, Jaimes-Viera, Garduño-Monroy, Layer, Pompa-Mera and Godinez2007). The town of Chalchihuitán sits on the southern edge of the Tecpatán–Ocosingo fault, one of the principal east–west reverse faults of the system (Hernández-Vergara et al. Reference Hernández-Vergara, Fitz Diaz, Brocard, Morán-Zenteno, Davidson, Hull and Pindell2021; Mora et al. Reference Mora, Jaimes-Viera, Garduño-Monroy, Layer, Pompa-Mera and Godinez2007). Although this region has been minimally studied, we hypothesize that this fault could plausibly have created geological conditions similar to those of the Motagua–Polochic Fault System. The fault zone immediately to the south, the Telestaquín–San Cristóbal Fault, contains a segment that runs west–east from just north of San Cristóbal de Las Casas, through the town of Huixtán, to the town of Altamirano (Hernández-Vergara et al. Reference Hernández-Vergara, Fitz Diaz, Brocard, Morán-Zenteno, Davidson, Hull and Pindell2021).

In 2017 and 2018, we visited local jewelers and market vendors in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, who reported to us that the greenstone objects that they sold were obtained from northwest Chiapas in the municipalities of Chalchihuitán and Chenalhó. Unfortunately, local armed conflicts during this time dispossessed large numbers of families from their homes, and also prevented us from traveling to these locations. Instead, we purchased small commercial samples from a number of vendors, asking them for the general provenience of each sample, and obtaining as much information as possible. In all cases where we purchased samples, the vendors told us that they obtained the raw materials second-hand, rather than quarrying or mining the materials themselves. A separate sample was collected from a road cut near the town of Huixtán, located approximately 30 km to the east of San Cristóbal de Las Casas. Below, we provide new mineralogical data on samples attributed to these source locations.

Materials

Archaeological samples

A total of 21 greenstone objects were identified from two sites in the Jovel Valley of highland Chiapas, Moxviquil and CV-38, by the Proyecto Económico de Los Altos de Chiapas, directed by Paris and López Bravo. These sites represent the two largest monumental centers in the Jovel Valley (Figure 2); they were constructed principally during the Late Classic period, and remained occupied during the Early Postclassic period (Paris Reference Paris2012). Moxviquil is located on the northern edge of the valley, and Cerro Ecatepec/CV-38 is located on its southwest corner. Cerro Ecatepec is positioned atop a steep limestone escarpment that includes linear mounds and masonry tombs (Culbert Reference Culbert1965). San Pedro y Pablo, or CV-38, is located on the valley floor below the escarpment, and included an I-shaped ballcourt and a concentration of public and residential architectural mounds (Aguilar Reference Aguilar2005; Culbert Reference Culbert1965). Our excavations in 2009, 2015, and 2016 targeted residential architecture at both sites.

Figure 2. Map of the Jovel Valley. Drafted by Roberto López Bravo from Geodatos E15E52 and E15D62, INEGI.

The sample of greenstone artifacts from these sites included beads in discoidal, tubular, and sculpted forms; ornament fragments; miniature manos; miniature axes; and a miniature effigy axe (Table 1; Figure 3). The objects range significantly in hue, including pale green, apple green, blueish green, and very dark green. Many of these objects, particularly the beads and ornaments, but also one of the miniature axe fragments (P7), were recovered from a funerary cave (Operation 7) located just below one of the residential hilltop zones in Moxviquil (Operation 4), where they likely served as funerary offerings and/or ornaments of the interred individuals. Most of the greenstone artifacts were recovered from contexts at the rear of the cave, and their original position may have been shifted due to the high level of post-depositional movement of remains and offerings, together with extensive modern looting and archaeological visitation by Frans Blom in the 1950s; we interpret them as offerings interred with the deceased individuals when they were placed in the cave (see Paris et al. Reference Paris, Bravo and Serafin2020).

Table 1. Jovel Valley greenstone archaeological specimens analyzed in the present study.

a op = operation; b cuadro = unit; c capa = cultural level; d XRF = X-ray fluorescence spectrometry; e XRD = X-ray diffraction; * = measurement of damaged or broken artifact.

Figure 3. Jovel Valley greenstone archaeological specimens analyzed in the present study. Photos by Elizabeth Paris.

A number of other greenstone objects were recovered from both Moxviquil and CV-38. A small mano fragment (P20), two of the miniature axes (P17 and P19), and the effigy miniature axe (P18), were found in the Moxviquil Operation 4 residential zone (Paris et al. Reference Paris, Bravo and Serafin2020). A fourth greenstone axe was found at CV-38 (P15). The three miniature axes are all between 5.0 and 6.1 cm in length, with damage to their distal ends suggestive of use, possibly in woodworking (P15, P17, and P19). Miniature axe P15 was recovered from a residential structure (Structure 10, Operation 3) at CV-38, and presents a flaring, convex bit with one corner heavily damaged from impact and striations on the tapered proximal end suggestive of hafting. Miniature axe P19 also exhibited significant usewear (microchipping and striations) on its convex distal edge, and was broken across the midsection. The axe was recovered from the lower levels of residential terrace fill adjacent to the remains of a domestic structure (Structure 8) together with ceramics and other objects dating to the Early Postclassic period (Paris et al. Reference Paris, Bravo and Serafin2020). A second miniature greenstone axe (P17) was recovered from a nearby context associated with the structure fill of Structure 9, and also had significant damage on one corner, likely from use. However, the effigy miniature axe (P18), was too small to have actually been hafted, and analysis under a Dino-lite digital microscope indicated no evidence of usewear, suggesting that it was an effigy rather than utilitarian. We hypothesize that it was used as a type of currency (Paris and López Bravo Reference Paris and Bravo2021b). The effigy miniature axe was recovered from the western edge of the terrace that supported Structure 9 (Paris et al. Reference Paris, Bravo and Serafin2020). The Moxviquil funerary cave and the CV-38 residence had occupations spanning the Late Classic and Early Postclassic periods, while the occupation at the Operation 4 residences was likely established in the Early Postclassic period (Paris et al. Reference Paris, Bravo and Serafin2020).

Comparative samples

For comparative purposes, we collected 19 greenstone samples from local commercial vendors in both highland Chiapas and highland Guatemala, as well as an additional sample from a road cut near the town of Huixtán (Table 2, Figure 4). As mentioned above, due to local militarized conflicts during the study period, we were not able to collect greenstone samples from Chalchihuitán and Chenalhó in person. Samples were purchased from five locations: a local jeweler in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, an artisan market in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, a jeweler in Antigua, an artisan market in Guatemala City, and the local vendors at the Zona Arqueológica de Iximche to the west of Antigua. We conducted interviews with local jewelers and vendors to determine the provenience of the sources to the best of their knowledge. The sources of the samples from San Cristóbal de Las Casas (SCLC) were consistently attributed to the neighboring municipalities of Chenalhó (SCLC artisan market) and Chalchihuitán (SCLC jeweler) in northwest Chiapas. The sources of the samples from the jeweler in Antigua were attributed to the Río Motagua while the vendors at the artisan markets in the Antigua and Guatemala City did not attribute their products to a specific source, though that would very likely also be somewhere in the Motagua Fault Zone. We intentionally purchased a range of colors, including everything from the apple-green color favored by the Classic period Maya, to the blueish-green color favored by the Olmec, as well as white, light green, mint green, dark green, and dark greenish black.

Table 2. XRD analysis results for comparative specimens from highland Chiapas and Guatemala.

Notes: XRD = X-ray diffraction; SCLC = San Cristóbal de Las Casas; RV = River Valley. For mottled samples, the dominant color is listed first.

Figure 4. Comparative greenstone specimens analyzed in the present study. Photos by Elizabeth Paris.

Methods

A number of methods have been used to characterize the composition and mineralogy of Mesoamerican greenstone in other studies. These include:

  1. 1) Detailed macroscopic minerology (Foshag Reference Foshag1957; Jaime-Riverón Reference Jaime-Riverón2010; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Jiménez-Galindo and Ruvalcaba-Sil2019; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b; Powis et al. Reference Powis, Horn III, Iannone, Healy, Garber, Awe, Skaggs and Howie2016);

  2. 2) Petrography (Jaime-Riverón Reference Jaime-Riverón2010; Jaime-Riverón et al. Reference Jaime-Riverón, Castilleros, Calligaro and Ocampo2009; Lin et al. Reference Lin, He, Lu and Yao2020; Powis et al. Reference Powis, Horn III, Iannone, Healy, Garber, Awe, Skaggs and Howie2016);

  3. 3) XRF (Aguilar et al. Reference Aguilar, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Bucio and Rivera-Muñoz2019; Aguilar-Melo et al. Reference Aguilar-Melo, Mitrani, Casanova-Gonzalez, Manrique-Ortega, Pérez-Ireta, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Tovalin-Ahumada, Moscoso-Rincón, Sesheña-Hernández and Lozada-Toledo2019; Delgado Robles et al. Reference Robles, Alma, Jose Luis, Claes, Ortega, González, Rojas, García and Castillo2015; Englehardt et al. Reference Englehardt, Insaurralde Caballero, Melgar Tísoc, Velázquez Maldonado, Torres, Bernard and Carrasco2020; Hauff Reference Hauff and Lange1993; Hernández-Murillo et al. Reference Hernández-Murillo, García-Piedra, Alfaro-Córdoba, Fernández-Esquivel, Ménager and Montero2022; Juárez-Rodríguez et al. Reference Juárez-Rodríguez, Argote-Espino, Santos-Ramírez and López-García2018; Knight et al. Reference Knight, Gantz, Carl, Young, Kovacevich, Crawford, Torok and Baas2024; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Claes, Casanova-González, Ruvalcaba-Sil, García-Bucio and Lowe2014; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Jiménez-Galindo and Ruvalcaba-Sil2019; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b; Melgar et al. Reference Melgar, Solís and Ruvalcaba2012; Ruvalcaba et al. Reference Ruvalcaba, Melgar, Calligaro and Turbanti-Memmi2011);

  4. 4) μ-XRF mapping (Lin et al. Reference Lin, He, Lu and Yao2020);

  5. 5) XRD (Aguilar et al. Reference Aguilar, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Bucio and Rivera-Muñoz2019; Aguilar-Melo et al. Reference Aguilar-Melo, Mitrani, Casanova-Gonzalez, Manrique-Ortega, Pérez-Ireta, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Tovalin-Ahumada, Moscoso-Rincón, Sesheña-Hernández and Lozada-Toledo2019; Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Sayre, Mishara, Hoopes and Lange1993b; Foshag Reference Foshag1957; Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:369; Hauff Reference Hauff and Lange1993; Jaime-Riverón et al. Reference Jaime-Riverón, Castilleros, Calligaro and Ocampo2009; Knight et al. Reference Knight, Gantz, Carl, Young, Kovacevich, Crawford, Torok and Baas2024; Lin et al. Reference Lin, He, Lu and Yao2020; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b; Ruvalcaba et al. Reference Ruvalcaba, Melgar, Calligaro and Turbanti-Memmi2011);

  6. 6) Scanning Electron Microscopy with Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (SEM/EDS) (Harlow et al. Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:369; Jaime-Riverón et al. Reference Jaime-Riverón, Castilleros, Calligaro and Ocampo2009; Knight et al. Reference Knight, Gantz, Carl, Young, Kovacevich, Crawford, Torok and Baas2024; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Jiménez-Galindo and Ruvalcaba-Sil2019; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b; Melgar Tísoc et al. Reference Tísoc, Ricardo, Ciriaco and Desruelles2018);

  7. 7) Electron probe microanalysis (Lin et al. Reference Lin, He, Lu and Yao2020);

  8. 8) Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS) (Healy et al. Reference Healy, Doran, Bastian Georg and March2018; Kovacevich et al. Reference Kovacevich, Neff, Bishop, Speakman and Neff2005);

  9. 9) Neutron Activation Analysis (NAA) (Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Sayre, van Zelst and van Zelst1985; Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Lange, Hoopes and Lange1993a; Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Sayre, Mishara, Hoopes and Lange1993b, Hammond et al. Reference Hammond, Aspinall, Feather, Hazelden, Gazard, Agrell, Earle and Ericson1977; Jaime-Riverón et al. Reference Jaime-Riverón, Castilleros, Calligaro and Ocampo2009);

  10. 10) Particle-Induced X-ray Emission (PIXE) (Jaime-Riverón et al. Reference Jaime-Riverón, Castilleros, Calligaro and Ocampo2009; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Jiménez-Galindo and Ruvalcaba-Sil2019; Ruvalcaba et al. Reference Ruvalcaba, Manzanilla, Melgar and Santa Cruz2008; Ruvalcaba et al. Reference Ruvalcaba, Melgar, Calligaro and Turbanti-Memmi2011);

  11. 11) Raman Spectroscopy (Aguilar-Melo et al. Reference Aguilar-Melo, Mitrani, Casanova-Gonzalez, Manrique-Ortega, Pérez-Ireta, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Tovalin-Ahumada, Moscoso-Rincón, Sesheña-Hernández and Lozada-Toledo2019; Bernard et al. Reference Bernard, de Guevara, Manrique, Ruvalcaba, Santasillia, Hepp and Diehl2022; Delgado Robles et al. Reference Robles, Alma, Jose Luis, Claes, Ortega, González, Rojas, García and Castillo2015; Gendron et al. Reference Gendron, Smith and Gendron-Badou2002; Hernández-Murillo et al. Reference Hernández-Murillo, García-Piedra, Alfaro-Córdoba, Fernández-Esquivel, Ménager and Montero2022; Knight et al. Reference Knight, Gantz, Carl, Young, Kovacevich, Crawford, Torok and Baas2024; Lin et al. Reference Lin, He, Lu and Yao2020; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Claes, Casanova-González, Ruvalcaba-Sil, García-Bucio and Lowe2014; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Jiménez-Galindo and Ruvalcaba-Sil2019; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b; Melgar et al. Reference Melgar, Solís and Ruvalcaba2012; Melgar Tísoc et al. Reference Tísoc, Ricardo, Ciriaco and Desruelles2018; Ruvalcaba et al. Reference Ruvalcaba, Melgar, Calligaro and Turbanti-Memmi2011; Smith Reference Smith, Edwards and Chalmers2005; Smith and Gendron Reference Smith and Gendron1997);

  12. 12) Fourier Transform-Infrared Spectroscopy (FT-IR) (Aguilar-Melo et al. Reference Aguilar-Melo, Mitrani, Casanova-Gonzalez, Manrique-Ortega, Pérez-Ireta, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Tovalin-Ahumada, Moscoso-Rincón, Sesheña-Hernández and Lozada-Toledo2019; Delgado Robles et al. Reference Robles, Alma, Jose Luis, Claes, Ortega, González, Rojas, García and Castillo2015; Hernández-Murillo et al. Reference Hernández-Murillo, García-Piedra, Alfaro-Córdoba, Fernández-Esquivel, Ménager and Montero2022; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Claes, Casanova-González, Ruvalcaba-Sil, García-Bucio and Lowe2014; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b);

  13. 13) Visible and Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (VNIR) (Curtiss Reference Curtiss and Lange1993; Hauff Reference Hauff and Lange1993);

  14. 14) Cathodoluminescence (Lin et al. Reference Lin, He, Lu and Yao2020);

As described below, our study uses a combination of XRF and XRD techniques. XRF is measured in weight-percent to 10 significant digits for the Bruker Tracer IV-SD calibrations used, so is not as sensitive as some other techniques such as ICP-MS and INAA, which typically measure in ppb or even up to 0.1 ppt; however, the advantages of XRF and XRD include the fact that they can be carried out both nondestructively and relatively rapidly (see Aguilar et al. Reference Aguilar, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Bucio and Rivera-Muñoz2019). When combined, they permit the consideration of both elemental and mineralogical composition (Aguilar et al. Reference Aguilar, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Bucio and Rivera-Muñoz2019; Aguilar-Melo et al. Reference Aguilar-Melo, Mitrani, Casanova-Gonzalez, Manrique-Ortega, Pérez-Ireta, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Tovalin-Ahumada, Moscoso-Rincón, Sesheña-Hernández and Lozada-Toledo2019; Lutterotti et al. Reference Lutterotti, Dell'Amore, Angelucci, Carrer and Gialanella2016; Mendoza Cuevas and Velázquez Maldonado Reference Mendoza Cuevas and Maldonado2015). As many scholars have noted, many “jade” objects are heterogeneous, with internally variable composition and with multiple minerals within a solid-state matrix (Bishop Reference Bishop2014:259; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b; Ruvalcaba et al. Reference Ruvalcaba, Melgar, Calligaro and Turbanti-Memmi2011). Techniques targeting minerology, such as XRD and Raman Spectroscopy, are critical for assessing greenstone object composition, and may be complimented by elemental techniques such as XRF, PIXE, INAA, ICP-MS, or SEM/EDS.

X-ray fluorescence

The chemical analysis was conducted by Paris at the University of Calgary, using a Bruker Tracer IV-SD (EDXRF) portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometer, with a silicon drift detector (SDD), Rhodium (Rh) target X-ray tube, a 3 x 4 mm x 7.5 μm beryllium window, and detection at rates of up to 200,000 ct/s. Instrument calibration was verified using the standard sample for the instrument provided by Bruker. Each sample location was analyzed twice: once using the Major Elements setting (15 kV, 35 μA, no filter, 180 s) and once using the Trace Elements setting (40 kV, 16.5 μA, Filter 1, 60 s). The empirical calibrations for these settings were developed by Bruker specifically to analyze geological materials of uncertain and variable composition such as sedimentary rocks or ceramics (the full list of elements is specified in Supplemental Tables S2.1 and S2.2). Trace-element settings using Filter 1 (an Al/Ti alloy of 300 μm/25 μm) and higher voltage allow for a more accurate quantification of higher-Z elements, with an automated timer and with a tabletop stand to allow for precise measurements. The results were interpreted using the analytical software provided for the instrument, using the empirical calibrations for these settings developed by Bruker, displayed in weight-percent (wt%). Each sample was placed on the sample window in order to maximize accuracy, using flat facets, smooth surfaces, and full contact where possible to minimize reflectance (see Hernández-Murillo et al. Reference Hernández-Murillo, García-Piedra, Alfaro-Córdoba, Fernández-Esquivel, Ménager and Montero2022). Bruker's documentation for the instrument states that the limit of detection (LOD, defined as the level of concentration at which the presence of an element in a sample can be detected above background) is 3σ as measured on a test blank.

As noted previously, the samples were analyzed using XRF spectrometry of unmodified artifact surfaces. Elemental concentrations represent bulk chemistry measurements within the approximately 3 x 4 mm spot area, with depth of penetration varying for measured elements as a function of photon energy and material density. As previously mentioned, many “jade” objects are heterogeneous, with internally variable composition, and multiple minerals within a solid-state matrix (Bishop Reference Bishop2014:259; Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Mitrani, Casanova-González, Pérez-Ireta, García-Bucio, Rangel-Chávez, Aguilar-Melo, de Lucio, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Sugiyama and Sugiyama2020b; Ruvalcaba et al. Reference Ruvalcaba, Melgar, Calligaro and Turbanti-Memmi2011); thus, depending on the sample location, any given XRF measurement may represent multiple mineral grains, and internal variation within samples is expected. For the Chenalhó square sample, 10 locations were analyzed in a quincunx formation on both sides of the sample; the results suggests relatively low variation in trace-element concentrations, and slightly greater variation in major element concentrations of Mg, Si, and Fe, although even for these elements, the coefficient of variation remained under 2 (Supplemental Table S1.1, Supplemental Figure S1.1). Mg and Si are two of the principal elements in serpentinite (Mg6[Si4O10](OH)8), suggesting that this variation is due to variation in beam placement with respect to individual mineral grains. Heterogeneous composition can be partially offset by using a larger spot size, and by pairing XRF with other nondestructive techniques such as XRD or elemental surface mapping to identify heterogeneous mineralogy within individual samples.

The exterior surfaces and edges of the objects were also examined and imaged using a Dino-lite digital microscope at 40x.

X-ray diffraction

The greenstone pieces were also analyzed by Meanwell at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by XRD. XRD uses X-rays to detect the reflections of specific crystal planes within the sample. This technique allows for the identification of crystalline mineral phases, which is not always possible through chemistry alone, particularly when multiple minerals are present in the same sample. Most of the smaller artifacts and reference specimens were analyzed in the Bruker D8 with a General Area Detector Diffraction System (GADDS) using a Cobalt (Co) Kα X-ray source (λ = 1.7190 Å) at 35 kV and 40 μA and a two-dimensional (2-D) detector. The Co source is particularly useful for analyzing samples that contain iron, like many of the greenstone samples, because the wavelength of Co incident X-rays does not cause fluorescence from iron unlike a Cu X-ray source (Henry et al. Reference Henry, Ahlburg, Andersen, Miralles, Stingaciu, Saura-Múzquiza and Christensena2022). The 2-D detector measures a portion of the Debye ring which can then be analyzed for inhomogeneities that result from oriented crystal grains in a sample, such as is the case for many polycrystalline geological samples (Flemming Reference Flemming2007). The diffraction patterns can also be examined for oval rings that indicate that the crystallites are stressed (He et al. Reference He, Preckwinkel and Smith2002). The samples were scanned through a 2-theta angle range of 15° to 80° in three frames with 120 s exposure time per frame, and the samples were also continually oscillated during the scan so that an approximately 1 mm2 area of the sample was exposed to the radiation, thus hopefully avoiding sampling only one mineral grain.

Two of the greenstone pieces (P19–20) were too thick to be placed in the Bruker D8 instrument, which requires a certain distance between the X-ray source and the sample. These pieces were instead analyzed in the Rigaku SmartLab XRD using a Cu Kα X-ray source. These were scanned through a 2-theta range of 0° to 90°. This machine is not equipped with a moving stage, so only a small spot was analyzed, although the broadest beam focus was used to attempt to analyze as large an area as possible. The Huixtán roadcut specimen (J-20) and reference sample J-15 were also analyzed in a different instrument, the PANalytical X'Pert with a Mo X-ray source, due to instrument availability.

After the data was collected, the diffraction patterns were integrated across the area of the 2-D results and the resultant peaks were imported to HighScore Plus to complete the phase identification. For each sample the background was removed and peaks were automatically detected and refined by hand. These peaks were compared to reference patterns of various minerals. In most cases, one to three mineral phases were clearly present, and occasionally one or more peaks were left unidentified. These peaks cannot be linked definitively to a specific mineral phase without additional peaks from that mineral.

Results

Jovel Valley specimens

In general terms, the archaeological greenstone specimens can be separated into a jadeite group (N = 8), a micaceous group (N = 7), and specimens that have a unique mineralogy within the sampled specimens (N = 6; Table 1, Figures 5 and 6, Supplemental Tables S2.1 and S2.2, Supplemental Figures S1.9–50, S1.134–154). Specimens in the jadeite group contained at least one of the jade-associated pyroxene minerals, including jadeite, omphacite, and diopside, along with potential accessory minerals. These included a diverse range of objects, including one of the miniature axes (P17), miniature effigy axe (P18), tubular beads (P5, P11), discoidal beads (P2), asymmetrical beads (P14a), and a bead carved in a shape that may be the stylized head of a feline (P3, see Figure 5a). Comparisons between the XRF (Supplemental Figures S1.9–S1.133) and XRD (Supplemental Figures S1.134–154) results indicated that the majority of the jadeite specimens lack potassium (Supplemental Table S2.1), which is commonly characteristic of muscovite mica. The only specimen within the jadeite group with a high potassium signal was the sample of diopside also containing calcite and grossular (green garnet; P12). The pyroxene minerals are significantly harder and denser than micas, which makes them harder to shape into the desired form, but results in finished objects that are significantly more durable. The identification of minerals frequently associated with jadeite deposits (albite, quartz) is unsurprising due to the metamorphic environment in which jadeite is formed. Notably, the XRF results indicated an absence of magnesium despite high calcium peaks (Supplemental Table S2.1) although significant magnesium concentrations were noted in the comparative Chenalhó samples, suggesting it is not a detection issue. This is unexpected because both elements are typically present in diopsides and many of the other materials found in the metamorphic environments associated with jadeite deposits, such as chlorite, soapstone, serpentine, dolomite, olivine, and monticellite.

Figure 5. Selected XRD diffraction patterns showing: (a) a jadeite group sample (artifact P-3), with the reference spectrum for jadeite; (b) a micaceous group sample (P-8), with the reference peaks for muscovite mica; and (c) the sample containing grossular (P-14c) with the reference peaks for grossular showing excellent agreement.

Figure 6. Principal components analysis (PCA) of Jovel Valley greenstone specimens (majors and traces), classified by mineral group. Jadeite group includes jadeite, omphacite, and diopside minerals; see Table 1. Paragonite mica (P_mica), muscovite mica (M_mica) and ephesite mica (E_mica) are differentiated. See Supplemental Tables S1.2, S1.3.

Several different types of micas were identified within the micaceous group, principally muscovite, paragonite, and ephesite. All of these objects were beads from the Moxviquil funerary cave, and they were often visually distinctive from the jadeite group, with a sparkly luster; some specimens also displayed a foliated crystal habit that is often characteristic of micas. Several of the samples identified through XRD as muscovite also had high potassium values as observed in XRF results (Supplemental Table S2.1). Artifacts containing muscovite mica included tubular beads (P4, P6, see Figure 5b) and discoidal beads (P8), while samples containing paragonite mica included tubular beads (P1, P6, and P9). Only one tubular bead contained ephesite (P10). Some of the samples from the micaceous group also contained other minerals, such as maghemite ((Fe3+0.670.33)Fe3+2O4), P1), green quartz (SiO2; P14b), and albite (Na(AlSi3O8); P10).

The last group of samples contained a range of other green minerals. One of the small tubular beads (P14c) was produced from a dark greenish-blue grossular, a type of green garnet (Figure 5c); this mineral was also found in discoidal bead P12, together with diopside and calcite. The miniature axe fragment from the funerary cave (P7) was a mixture of dolomite, quartz, and hematite, and was a dark greenish black in color. Notably, it was not classified as chloromelanite as per other archaeological specimens of a similar color (e.g. Foshag Reference Foshag1957:23). The small, irregular, projection-like sample (P13) has a highly distinctive composition which includes aragonite (CaCO3), calcium sulfate (CaSO4) and alunite (KAl3(SO4)2(OH)6). The XRF spectrum for this sample also contains sulfur; it the only sample that has sulfur as one of the major elements, which is consistent with this mineralogy (Supplemental Tables S2.1 and S2.2). Sample P13 also has a very fine granular texture, which was different from the other green stones analyzed. Finally, one of the miniature axes (P19) and the miniature rectangular mano fragment (P20) contained quartz and albite feldspar (see Table 1). As mentioned above, albite is a common sodium feldspar that occurs in association with micaceous and jadeite samples. It generally has a grayish or whitish tone, but may appear greenish with iron impurities; Sample P20 appears mint green in color.

Finally, the absence of copper in XRF or XRD diffraction patterns of copper minerals confirms that that the archaeological specimens do not contain malachite, turquoise, or other copper-based minerals.

Comparative specimens

In general terms, the comparative greenstone samples contain a range of minerals that include minerals from the jadeite group (N = 15), antigorite/lizardite (serpentinite; N = 5) (see Table 2; Supplemental Tables S1.4, S1.5, S2.3, S2.4, Supplemental Figures S1.2, S1.3, S1.51–133, S1.155–S1.174). All three specimens attributed to Chalchihuitán were characterized as jadeite/omphacite. The four specimens attributed to Chenalhó were all characterized as serpentinite (antigorite), with a high wt% Fe in the XRF results (Supplemental Table S2.1; Supplemental Figure S1.4). The high iron may be partially due to included hematite, which was seen in at least one of the XRD diffraction patterns. Notably, the jadeite samples attributed to Chalchihuitán included a range of colors, which we classified as forest green, mint green, and light green; while the Chenalhó specimens included a narrower range of colors including normal green and dark green. The roadcut specimen from near the town of Huixtán is very similar to the Chenalhó specimens, and is lizardite (serpentinite).

The commercial specimens purchased in highland Guatemala were predominantly jadeite, and also included commonly associated minerals such as diopside, omphacite, albite, and quartz. Jadeite/omphacite samples presented a variety of colors, from white, to light green to apple green, to blueish green, to dark greenish black. These findings reinforce the need for compositional analysis in assessing minerology, as a reliance on color can be highly misleading.

XRF analysis suggests that there are some small trace-element compositional differences between Chiapas and Guatemala jadeite samples. For these tests, only trace elements were used to prevent duplication of sorting by mineralogy. MANOVA (multivariate analysis of variance; specifically Pillai's trace) was used to compare multivariate means of Guatemala and Chalchihuitán jadeite samples by group, performed on trace elements (CoKa1, NiKa1, CuKa1, ZnKa1, AsKa1, PbLa1, ThLa1, RbKa1, U.La1, SrKa1, Y.Ka1, ZrKa1, NbKa1, MoKa1, SnKa1, SbKa1) after eliminating one outlier identified through the principal components analysis (PCA) (J3.3). Pillai's trace statistic was 0.64382, with a p-value of 0.0569, suggesting compositional overlap between the two groups, and a lack of statistical significance in the differences between the trace-element composition, but is only just above a significant probability value (Supplemental Table S1.6). Follow-up analysis examining the summary of the analysis of variance models for each element indicates that while concentrations of most elements are not significantly different, trace elements with significant p-values (below 0.05) include Zn, Sr, Nb, and Sb; however, there is still significant overlap in the distributions of the raw concentration values between the two groups (Figure 7; Supplemental Figures S1.5, S1.6, S1.7, and S1.8). The lack of significance in Pillai's trace and the overlap in the distributions does not currently allow us to assign geographical provenance to Jovel Valley archaeological specimens, whether composed of jadeite or of other minerals (Figure 8). While XRF and XRD are useful in providing a relatively detailed characterization of the specimens in our sample, we speculate that other methods are needed to differentiate between sources. Techniques that can measure heavier trace elements at ppb or ppt, such as INAA or ICP-MS, may be able to identify discriminating factors.

Figure 7. Scatterplot matrix of elemental concentrations for Nb, Sb, Sr, and Zn for jadeite comparative samples, by provenance group. Concentration ellipses are 0.95.

Figure 8. Principal components analysis (PCA) of trace elements of comparative and Jovel Valley jadeite specimens, classified by provenance. Concentration ellipses are 0.95. See Supplemental Tables S1.4 and S1.5.

Discussion and conclusion

The Jovel Valley greenstone assemblage included green objects with a wide variety of mineralogies, which were often surprising with respect to their macroscopic characteristics such as color, texture, and luster. The artifacts included a jadeite group that contained a variety of pyroxene minerals, such as jadeite, omphacite, and diopside; a micaceous group, which included paragonite, muscovite, and ephesite; and a variety of other green minerals. Certain associations between form and mineralogy were noted; for example, the miniature axes and the mano were made out of quartz/albite. However, axes P17 and P18 also contained jadeite minerals, so this vague association is not statistically significant, given the sample size. Tubular and discoidal beads were made out of a wide range of materials, with similar dimensions, and all recovered from the Moxviquil funerary cave context. While jadeite is more valued today, we can speculate that the micaceous, grossular, and quartz beads may have come from the same deposit areas, and may have also been valued by Jovel Valley for their range of jadeite-like green colors. The limited number of greenstone artifacts recovered from Jovel Valley sites suggests that it was relatively rare and valuable. However, the fact that the miniature axes show evidence of usewear (with the exception of the effigy, P18), and were found in non-elite household midden contexts, suggests that high-value raw materials could also have utilitarian uses and were relatively accessible across the socioeconomic spectrum. The selection of mineral resources used for the axes may also be related to the fact that the axes appear to have been used, because quartz, albite, and jadeite/pyroxene are harder than micas. Grossular, however, is in the same hardness range as quartz.

If we assume (perhaps incorrectly) that many of the Jovel Valley greenstone items were imported from the Motagua rather than Chalchihuitán, our findings suggest a range of raw material sources, as would be expected for items received through long-distance exchange. For example, Harlow and others (Reference Harlow, Sisson and Sorensen2011:380), argue that none of the jadeitites to the north of the Motagua Fault contain quartz, either as inclusions in jadeite or in veins, but all contain albite, mica, and usually analcime; while jadeites from south of the Motagua Fault frequently present quartz inclusions in jadeitite. However, many of the Jovel Valley specimens contain both albite and quartz, suggesting an unidentified source, either in the Motagua or elsewhere. Furthermore, the Jovel Valley micaceous specimens include both paragonite and muscovite, and specimen P6 includes both types, although paragonite is characteristic of the north Motagua and muscovite is more common in the south Motagua deposits. Minimally, we consider it very unlikely that a single location in the Motagua Valley supplied all of the greenstone items consumed by Jovel Valley sites.

Working towards a general assessment of a potential Chalchihuitán jadeite source, the mineralogy appears to have expected characteristics wherein jadeite specimens (attributed to Chalchihuitán) were recovered in close proximity to green antigorite (serpentinite) deposits (attributed to Chenalhó). Materials of both mineralogies displayed a range of colors, a characteristic also noted for the comparative Motagua samples. This suggests that as with the Motagua–Polochic Fault System, the proposed source locations in northwest Chiapas contain a range of minerals that includes both jadeites and serpentinites, likely with a small degree of geographic separation with respect to the locations of modern mining activity. At Chiapa de Corzo, Tomb 1 is one of the earliest elite funerary contexts in the region (750–700 b.c.), and contained 2,700 greenstone beads, including jadeite, antigorite, green quartz, and one turquoise specimen (Manrique-Ortega et al. Reference Manrique-Ortega, Claes, Casanova-González, Ruvalcaba-Sil, García-Bucio and Lowe2014). Greenstone assemblages at large Classic period monumental zones in northeast Chiapas contain a diverse range of minerals: offerings at Bonampak include jadeite, omphacite, diopside, albite, grossular, quartz, amazonite, dolomite, serpentine, and others (Aguilar-Melo et al. Reference Aguilar-Melo, Mitrani, Casanova-Gonzalez, Manrique-Ortega, Pérez-Ireta, Ruvalcaba-Sil, Tovalin-Ahumada, Moscoso-Rincón, Sesheña-Hernández and Lozada-Toledo2019:1081), while offerings at Palenque contain jadeite, omphacite, amazonite, albite, muscovite and green quartz (Delgado Robles et al. Reference Robles, Alma, Jose Luis, Claes, Ortega, González, Rojas, García and Castillo2015). The current sample of Jovel Valley archaeological samples contains specimens that could potentially be consistent with the Chalchihuitán jadeite samples, but are not consistent with the current sample of serpentinite samples from Chenalhó or Huixtán. We currently lack sufficient evidence for other types of other minerals that could plausibly be associated with the Chalchihuitán/Chenalhó deposits. We can speculate that they may include albite, quartz, and/or various types of mica if they bear similarity to the Motagua Fault Zone formations, but more work is needed in order to properly characterize these deposits.

The Jovel Valley most likely received Motagua jade and other greenstone (along with El Chayal obsidian; see Paris and López Bravo Reference Paris and Bravo2021a) through a variety of historically documented routes (Figure 9; see Adams Reference Adams, Lee and Navarrete1978; Feldman Reference Feldman, Lee and Navarrete1978; Navarrete Reference Navarrete, Lee and Navarrete1978). Numerous scholars have argued that a principal north–south trade route (termed the Great Western Trade Route by Demarest et al. Reference Demarest, Andrieu, Torres, Forné, Barrientos and Wolf2014) existed between Kaminaljuyu in the central Guatemala highlands, and the central Peten region (Adams Reference Adams, Lee and Navarrete1978; Andrieu et al. Reference Andrieu, Rodas and Luin2014; Arnauld Reference Arnauld1990; Bassie-Sweet Reference Bassie-Sweet2021:244; Demarest et al. Reference Demarest, Andrieu, Torres, Forné, Barrientos and Wolf2014; Feldman Reference Feldman, Lee and Navarrete1978; Hammond Reference Hammond1972; Woodfill and Andrieu Reference Woodfill and Andrieu2012). Overland mountain routes linked highland obsidian sources near Kaminaljuyu (the El Chayal source) with the cloud forest quetzal habitat in Alta Verapaz, and the jade sources of the Motagua, to the Cobán Plateau (Bassie-Sweet Reference Bassie-Sweet2021; Feldman Reference Feldman, Lee and Navarrete1978). From there, goods could be: 1) transported downriver by canoe, via the Chixoy-Salinas, Pasión or Usumacinta Rivers; 2) transported north along overland routes to Lago Peten Itza; 3) transported west across overland routes via Chinkultic to the Comitán Plateau; or 4) transported east through the Motagua drainage to Lake Izabal (Bassie-Sweet Reference Bassie-Sweet2021; Feldman Reference Feldman, Lee and Navarrete1978). Goods transported westward via Chinkultic would likely have reached La Trinitaria (Zapaluta; Navarrete Reference Navarrete, Lee and Navarrete1978), and from there would most likely have been transported westward across the Comitán Plateau and highland routes to the Jovel Valley. Jade and obsidian could also have been transported from highland Guatemala south through the Cuchumatanes Mountains via Zaculeu or Nebaj (Feldman Reference Feldman, Lee and Navarrete1978); then either north to the Comitán Plateau, or west via canoe along the Grijalva River to port towns such as Chiapa, Sitio Ruíz, or Acala, then to the Jovel Valley via overland routes (Navarrete Reference Navarrete, Lee and Navarrete1978).

Figure 9. Hypothesized and colonial period trade routes for greenstone and other commodities. Colonial routes are illustrated after Adams Reference Adams, Lee and Navarrete1978, Feldman Reference Feldman, Lee and Navarrete1978, and Navarrete Reference Navarrete, Lee and Navarrete1978; hypothesized routes are illustrated after Demarest et al. Reference Demarest, Andrieu, Torres, Forné, Barrientos and Wolf2014:Figure 5 and Woodfill and Andrieu Reference Woodfill and Andrieu2012:Figure 3.

Chalchihuitán is equally plausible as a supplier of jadeite commodities to the Jovel Valley, via transportation routes connecting the Jovel Valley with Gulf Coast trading colonies in Cimatán (a Nahuatl-speaking trade colony on the Gulf Coast). Both Bernal Díaz del Castillo and Diego de Godoy, who took part in the 1524 siege of Chamula under Luís Marín, mention that the Spanish armies were led by their Zinacantán allies (just west of the Jovel Valley) to the Gulf Coast, by traveling north to Huitiupan (near Simojovel), then west to Tapilula, and then north again to the town of Ixtapangajoya in Cimatán province; Bishop Bartolomé de Las Casas later passed along this route in reverse (Navarrete Reference Navarrete, Lee and Navarrete1978; Viqueira Reference Viqueira and Cramaussel2006; Viqueira Albán Reference Viqueira Albán1999). Viqueira (Reference Viqueira and Cramaussel2006) has hypothesized that parts of this route, called “Los Zoques” in the colonial period, may have been used by Aztec vanguard merchants for military incursions to secure transportation routes from their trade colonies in Cimatán, across highland Chiapas via Huixtán and Zinacantán, to the Soconusco province, evading Chiapa de Corzo and the portion of the Central Depression controlled by the Chiapanecs. Few details are available for the portion of the journeys between the Jovel Valley and Huitiupan. Still, the pre-Hispanic route may have passed from the Jovel Valley through Chamula, San Andrés Larrainzar, and the polity capital of Huixtán (today Santiago El Pinar), which is located about 8 km west of Chalchihuitán as the crow flies (Viqueira Reference Viqueira and Cramaussel2006:151). A second, less-traveled route from the Jovel Valley takes a slightly more easterly route, passing by the site of Moxviquil itself, to Chenalhó and Chalchihuitán, along smaller mountain roads. The endpoint of both routes is Simojovel (just south of Huitiupan), location of the largest amber source in Mesoamerica, which formed part of the tribute demanded by the Aztec Empire from towns in the Soconusco (Navarrete Reference Navarrete, Lee and Navarrete1978). Additional roads connected Tapilula north to piedmont towns such as Ixtacomitán, Solosuchiapa, Ixtapantajoya, and Teapa in the Colonial period (and very likely in pre-Columbian times); Ixtacomitán was a major cacao production area (Wasserstrom Reference Wasserstrom1983:38), and the band of cloud forest habitat between Tapilula and Teapa was well-known as quetzal habitat (Palacios Reference Palacios1928; Solórzano et al. Reference Solórzano, Castillo-Santiago, Navarrete-Gutierrez and Oyama2003). Thus, overland trade routes connecting the Jovel Valley and Cimatán plausibly facilitated the transport of at least four high-value natural resources (greenstone, amber, cacao, and quetzal feathers). At the northern ends of these routes, Nahua merchants obtained greenstone items (particularly quetzalchalchihuitl) and other Maya-area resources (Spondylus shell, tortoise shell, feathers, and animal pelts) at the important trading centers of Xicalanco and Cimatán (Sahagún Reference Sahagún1959:18)

The sample of archaeological specimens from Moxviquil and CV-38, while small, provides significant insights into the use and importance of greenstone objects for everyday households at the small polities that defined this region during the Late Classic and Early Postclassic periods, as well as new hypotheses concerning the trade routes that supplied them. These objects were personal adornments, funerary ornaments, currencies, and well-used tools, with green colors that connotated preciousness and high value. The chemical and mineralogical compositions of these objects suggest that they were crafted from a variety of stones, mostly available within the Motagua–Polochic Fault System, and also possibly from newly described jadeite sources attributed to Chalchihuitán by our local contacts. More work is needed to characterize the range of minerals and their composition from this location, and the degree to which they were exploited in pre-Columbian times, and to perhaps reconsider potential trade routes and exchange relationships that may have connected highland Chiapas and its high-value raw materials with the broader Mesoamerican world.

Resumen en español

La piedra verde fue utilizada durante la época prehispánica en Mesoámerica para producir artículos de importancia cultural, como hachas, orejeras, figurillas y cuentas; objetos que se usaban a menudo para la acumulación de riqueza, y como adornos, símbolos de estatus y elementos preciosos en ofrendas y contextos funerarios. Los objetos eran fabricados de jadeíta, así como de otros minerales verdes a los que a menudo se hace referencia como “jade social.”

La presente investigación muestra las características mineralógicas de 21 artefactos de piedra verde recuperados en sitios del Valle de Jovel, Chiapas, México, para documentar la variedad de minerales verdes aprovechados por sus habitantes. Los artefactos fueron recuperados por el Proyecto Económico de Los Altos de Chiapas, dirigido por Paris y López Bravo, durante las temporadas 2009, 2015 y 2016. Los materiales provienen de una variedad de contextos; la mayoría fueron recuperados en una cueva funeraria en el sitio de Moxviquil, y el resto provienen de contextos domésticos en otros sitios a lo largo del valle. Los tipos de artefactos de piedra verde incluyen cuentas de forma discoidal, tubular y talladas; fragmentos de adornos; manos miniatura; hachas miniatura; y un hacha efigie miniatura.

El análisis composicional de los objetos sugiere que los mayas del Valle de Jovel del período Clásico Tardío (600–900 d.C.) y Posclásico Temprano (900–1200 d.C.) tuvieron acceso a una variedad de minerales de piedra verde, incluidas serpentinita, mica verde, grosularia y jadeíta. La caracterización de los objetos por XRD y XRF indica que las cuentas estaban hechas de una variedad de materiales, incluido jade/onfacita; micas como moscovita, paragonita y efesita; y grosularia (granate verde). Las hachas en miniatura estaban hechas de jade, dolomita y mezclas de albita y cuarzo. La ausencia de cobre en los espectros XRF o XRD confirma que los objetos arqueológicos no contienen malaquita, turquesa u otros minerales a base de cobre.

Para comprender mejor las posibles sitos de origen de los minerales, también analizamos muestras de referencia de la zona de falla Motagua-Polochic y fuentes vinculadas al área de Chalchihuitán-Chenalhó en Chiapas, México. Estas fuentes se compraron de proveedores locales, principalmente en la Ciudad de Guatemala, Antigua y San Cristóbal de las Casas, a quienes se entrevistó sobre su procedencia geográfica. Los especímenes comerciales comprados en las tierras altas de Guatemala eran predominantemente jadeíta y también incluían minerales comúnmente asociados como diópsido, onfacita, albita y cuarzo. Dentro del área de Chalchihuitán-Chenalhó, especímenes de jadeíta (atribuidos a Chalchihuitán) parecen haber sido recuperados muy cerca de depósitos de antigorita verde (serpentinita) atribuidos a Chenalhó. La comparación sugiere que ambas áreas son regiones potenciales de fuente de materia prima de piedra verde utilizada en el Valle de Jovel, y que la asociación entre las micas y los minerales de jade sugiere la presencia de múltiples fuentes de materiales en la colección de artefactos.

Planteamos que los habitantes del Valle de Jovel tuvieron acceso a materiales intercambiados a larga distancia a través de rutas comerciales históricamente documentadas, que permitieron el movimiento de materiales de piedra verde desde el Valle del Río Motagua hacia las tierras altas de Chiapas al occidente, y posiblemente también desde el área de Chalchihuitán-Chenalhó hacia el sur. Las rutas comerciales terrestres que conectan el valle de Jovel con el área de Chalchihuitán-Chenalhó y el área de Cimatán de la costa del Golfo habrían facilitado el traslado de al menos cuatro recursos naturales de alto valor (piedra verde, ámbar, cacao y plumas de quetzal). Se necesita más trabajo para caracterizar la variedad de minerales y su composición del área de Chalchihuitán-Chenalhó, el grado en que fueron explotados en la época precolombina y tal vez reconsiderar posibles rutas comerciales y relaciones de intercambio que pueden haber conectado las tierras altas de Chiapas y sus alrededores con sus contemporáneos mesoamericanos.

Acknowledgments:

We thank the Consejo de Arqueología, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH) for permits granted to the Proyecto Económico de los Altos de Chiapas (2009) and Proyecto Interacción Entre Reinos en los Altos de Chiapas (2015), as well as permission to export and analyze the samples (Oficio 40.3S.16-2018/1358). Funding for the 2009 season was provided by a National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant (Award ID 0836590) to Paris to support fieldwork and lab analysis in 2009. Support for the 2015 excavations was provided by a Wenner-Gren Foundation International Collaborative Research Grant to Paris and López Bravo. We thank the University of Calgary, Universidad de Ciencias y Artes de Chiapas, ProNatura Chiapas, Museo Na Bolom, Centro INAH-Chiapas, the New World Archaeological Foundation, and our project staff and students. Many thanks also to the Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology at MIT, and the Materials Research Laboratory at MIT, particularly Dr. Charles Settens and Dr. Jordan Cox. This work was carried out in part through the use of MIT.nano's facilities.

Competing interests

The author(s) declare none.

Data availability statement

Calibrated data for the XRF analysis of the reference samples and archaeological objects are included in the Supplementary Data files with this paper. The raw XRD spectra will be hosted on the Ancient Mesoamerica website.

Funding statement

Funding for the 2009 season was provided by a National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant (Award ID 0836590) to Paris to support fieldwork and lab analysis in 2009. Support for the 2015 excavations was provided by a Wenner-Gren Foundation International Collaborative Research Grant to Paris and López Bravo.

Supplemental material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S095653612500001X

Supplemental Tables

Supplemental Table S1.1. Summary statistics of 10 sample locations on the Chenalhó square comparative sample.

Supplemental Table S1.2 Component loadings for the first 15 principal components analysis for Jovel Valley samples (major and trace elements).

Supplemental Table S1.3 Importance of components for the first 15 principal components analysis for Jovel Valley samples (major and trace elements).

Supplemental Table S1.4 Component loadings for the first 15 principal components analysis for comparative greenstone samples (major and trace elements).

Supplemental Table S1.5 Importance of components for the first 15 principal components analysis for comparative greenstone samples (major and trace elements).

Supplemental Table S1.6 MANOVA Pillai's trace analysis of trace elements for jadeite comparative samples, by sample provenance groups (Guatemala vs. Chalchihuitán).

Supplemental Table S2.1 Major element concentrations for Jovel Valley greenstone samples.

Supplemental Table S2.2 Trace element concentrations for Jovel Valley greenstone samples.

Supplemental Table S2.3 Major element concentrations for comparative greenstone samples.

Supplemental Table S2.4 Trace element concentrations for comparative greenstone samples.

Supplemental Figures

Supplemental Figure S1.1. Boxplot of elemental concentrations for 10 sample locations on the Chenalhó square comparative sample.

Supplemental Figure S1.2. Biplot of principal components (PC) for elemental concentrations of comparative greenstone specimens, including multiple points of analysis per specimen.

Supplemental Figure S1.3. Biplot of principal components (PC) for elemental concentrations (majors and traces) of comparative greenstone specimens by provenance. The jadeite outlier (J3.3) is characterized by a spot location with an unusually high potassium concentration.

Supplemental Figure S1.4. Biplot of principal components (PC) for elemental concentrations (majors and traces) of comparative greenstone specimens for serpentinite (antigorite/lizardite) specimens. Most samples were sourced from Chenalhó (J4, Chenalho1, Chenalho2, Chenalho3) while J20 was sourced from Huixtán.

Supplemental Figure S1.5. Ternary diagram of trace-element concentrations for ZnKa1, SbKa1, and NbKa1 for jadeite specimens, classified by provenance.

Supplemental Figure S1.6. Principal components analysis (PCA) of all elements (majors and traces) of comparative greenstone specimens, classified by provenance. See Supplemental Tables S1.4 and S1.5.

Supplemental Figure S1.7. Scatterplot matrix of elemental concentrations for Zn, Nb, Sb, and Sr for comparative samples, by provenance group. See Supplemental Table S1.5.

Supplemental Figure S1.8. Principal components analysis (PCA) of trace elements of comparative jadeite specimens, classified by provenance.

Supplemental Figure S1.9. Sample P1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.10. Sample P1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.11. Sample P2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.12. Sample P2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.13. Sample P3. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.14. Sample P3. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.15. Sample P4. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.16. Sample P4. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.17. Sample P5. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.18. Sample P5. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.19. Sample P6. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.20. Sample P6. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.21. Sample P7. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.22. Sample P7. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.23. Sample P8. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.24. Sample P8. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.25. Sample P9. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.26. Sample P9. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.27. Sample P10. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.28. Sample P10. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.29. Sample P11. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter. Red = greenstone; green = brown coating

Supplemental Figure S1.30. Sample P11. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1. Red = greenstone; green = brown coating

Supplemental Figure S1.31. Sample P12. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.32. Sample P12. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.33. Sample P13. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.34. Sample P13. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.35. Sample P14a. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.36. Sample P14a. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.37. Sample P14b. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.38. Sample P14b. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.39. Sample P14c. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.40. Sample P14c. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.41. Sample P15. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.42. Sample P15. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.43. Sample P17. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.44. Sample P17. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.45. Sample P18. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.46. Sample P18. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.47. Sample P19. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.48. Sample P19. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.49. Sample P20. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.50. Sample P20. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.51. Sample J1.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.52. Sample J1.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.53. Sample J1.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.54. Sample J1.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.55. Sample J1.3. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.56. Sample J1.3. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.57. Sample J1.4. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.58. Sample J1.4. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.59. Sample J1.5. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.60. Sample J1.5. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.61. Sample J2.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.62. Sample J2.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.63. Sample J2.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.64. Sample J2.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.65. Sample J2.3. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.66. Sample J2.3. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.67. Sample J2.4. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.68. Sample J2.4. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.69. Sample J3.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.70. Sample J3.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.71. Sample J3.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.72. Sample J3.3. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.73. Sample J3.3. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.74. Sample J4.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.75. Sample J4.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.76. Sample J4.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.77. Sample J4.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.78. Sample J5.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.79. Sample J5.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.80. Sample J5.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.81. Sample J5.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.82. Sample J6.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.83. Sample J6.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.84. Sample J6.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.85. Sample J6.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.86. Sample J7.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.87. Sample J7.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.88. Sample J7.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.89. Sample J7.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.90. Sample J8.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.91. Sample J8.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.92. Sample J8.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.93. Sample J8.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.94. Sample J9.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.95. Sample J9.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.96. Sample J9.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.97. Sample J9.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.98. Sample J10.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.99. Sample J10.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.100. Sample J10.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.101. Sample J10.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.102. Sample J10.3. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.103. Sample J10.3. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.104. Sample J11.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.105. Sample J11.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.106. Sample J11.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.107. Sample J11.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.108. Sample J12.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.109. Sample J12.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.110. Sample J12.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.111. Sample J12.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.112. Sample J13.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.113. Sample J13.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.114. Sample J13.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.115. Sample J13.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.116. Sample J14.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.117. Sample J14.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.118. Sample J14.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.119. Sample J14.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.120. Sample J15.1. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.121. Sample J15.1. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.122. Sample J15.2. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.123. Sample J15.2. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.124. Sample J20.1.1 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.125. Sample J20.1.1 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.126. Sample J20.2.1 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.127. Sample J20.2.1 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1. 128. Chenalhó round. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.129. Chenalhó round. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.130. Chenalhó square. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.131. Chenalhó square. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.132. Chenalhó teardrop. 15 kV, 35 μA, 180 s, no vacuum, no filter.

Supplemental Figure S1.133. Chenalhó teardrop. 40 kV, 16.5 μA, 60 s, no vacuum, Filter 1.

Supplemental Figure S1.134. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-1 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.135. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-2 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.136. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-3 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.137. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-4 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.138. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-5 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.139. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-6 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.140. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-7 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.141. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-8 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.142. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-9 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.143. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-10 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.144. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-11 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.145. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-12 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.146. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-13 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.147. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-14A with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.148. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-14B with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.149. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-14C with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.150. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-15 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.151. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-17 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.152. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-18 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.153. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-19 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.154. X-ray diffraction pattern of P-20 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.155. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-1 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.156. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-2 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.157. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-3 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.158. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-4 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.159. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-5 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.160. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-6 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.161. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-7 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.162. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-8 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.163. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-9 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.164. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-10 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.165. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-11 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.166. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-12 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.167. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-13 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.168. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-14 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.169. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-15 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.170. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-17 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.171. X-ray diffraction pattern of J-20 with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.172. X-ray diffraction pattern of Chenalhó square with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.173. X-ray diffraction pattern of Chenalhó round with phase identification.

Supplemental Figure S1.174. X-ray diffraction pattern of Chenalhó teardrop with phase identification.

References

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of Mesoamerica with sites and greenstone-bearing areas described in the text. Sites emphasized in the text are highlighted in red. Drafted by Elizabeth Paris, from base map by Wikimedia Commons (Sémhur / Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY-4.0), with reference to Powis et al. 2016:Figure 2.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Map of the Jovel Valley. Drafted by Roberto López Bravo from Geodatos E15E52 and E15D62, INEGI.

Figure 2

Table 1. Jovel Valley greenstone archaeological specimens analyzed in the present study.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Jovel Valley greenstone archaeological specimens analyzed in the present study. Photos by Elizabeth Paris.

Figure 4

Table 2. XRD analysis results for comparative specimens from highland Chiapas and Guatemala.

Figure 5

Figure 4. Comparative greenstone specimens analyzed in the present study. Photos by Elizabeth Paris.

Figure 6

Figure 5. Selected XRD diffraction patterns showing: (a) a jadeite group sample (artifact P-3), with the reference spectrum for jadeite; (b) a micaceous group sample (P-8), with the reference peaks for muscovite mica; and (c) the sample containing grossular (P-14c) with the reference peaks for grossular showing excellent agreement.

Figure 7

Figure 6. Principal components analysis (PCA) of Jovel Valley greenstone specimens (majors and traces), classified by mineral group. Jadeite group includes jadeite, omphacite, and diopside minerals; see Table 1. Paragonite mica (P_mica), muscovite mica (M_mica) and ephesite mica (E_mica) are differentiated. See Supplemental Tables S1.2, S1.3.

Figure 8

Figure 7. Scatterplot matrix of elemental concentrations for Nb, Sb, Sr, and Zn for jadeite comparative samples, by provenance group. Concentration ellipses are 0.95.

Figure 9

Figure 8. Principal components analysis (PCA) of trace elements of comparative and Jovel Valley jadeite specimens, classified by provenance. Concentration ellipses are 0.95. See Supplemental Tables S1.4 and S1.5.

Figure 10

Figure 9. Hypothesized and colonial period trade routes for greenstone and other commodities. Colonial routes are illustrated after Adams 1978, Feldman 1978, and Navarrete 1978; hypothesized routes are illustrated after Demarest et al. 2014:Figure 5 and Woodfill and Andrieu 2012:Figure 3.

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