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BANWARI TRACE IN TRINIDAD - THE OLDEST SITE IN THE WEST INDIES!
The archaeological
site of Banwari Trace was recently featured
in World Monument Watch 2004, an internationally
acclaimed magazine that showcases the world’s
100 most endangered sites. The following article
is designed to raise public awareness to an
important vestige of Trinidad and Tobago’s
cultural heritage.
Dated to about 5000 B.C.
(years Before Christ) or 7000 B.P (years Before
Present), the archaeological site at Banwari
Trace in southwestern Trinidad is the oldest
pre-Columbian site in the West Indies (Rouse
and Allaire 1978). Archaeological research
of the site has also shed light on the patterns
of migration of Archaic (pre-ceramic) peoples
from mainland South America to the Lesser Antilles
via Trinidad between 5000 and 2000 B.C. (see
Davis 1993) as well provided rich insights
into the lifeways of one of the earliest pre-Columbian
settlers in the Caribbean. In addition, Banwari
Trace has yielded human remains of Trinidad’s
oldest resident.
Banwari Trace’s Antiquity
In addressing what constitutes the Archaic, R. Christopher Goodwin
(1978) recognized three different perspectives: first, the Archaic
as an age defined by the absence of pottery and the presence
of ground stone and/or shell; second, the Archaic as a developmental
stage characterized by the marine-oriented subsistence that followed
a terrestrial hunting-based economy (Keegan 1994). Myriad Archaic
sites have been identified throughout the West Indies, for example,
in St. Kitts, Nevis, Antigua, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Antigua,
along the north and south coasts of Haiti and in the river valleys
and along the coast of Dominican Republic and Cuba (Keegan 1994;
Rouse 1992). Besides Banwari Trace, several other Archaic sites
have been identified in Trinidad and Tobago, for example, Poonah
Road, Ortoire, St. John, Chip Chip Hill and Milford. However
of all the Archaic-age sites in the West Indies, Banwari Trace
is the oldest, with radiocarbon dates indicating a chronology
of approximately 7000 B.P.
Radiocarbon chronology suggests that the first period of Archaic
occupation at the Banwari Trace site spanned from approximately
7200 to 6100 B.P., (Strata 1 and II or Early Banwari Trace),
whereas the second episode of midden accumulation (Stratum III
or Late Banwari Trace) probably lasted from 6100 B.P. until 5500
BP (Boomert 2000). The antiquity of the Banwari Trace site is
further evidenced by the presence of only freshwater shells in
the lower layers, dating from the time before Trinidad was separated
from the mainland by the postglacial rise in sea level (Rouse
1992).
Banwari Trace and Patterns of Archaic Migration into the Caribbean
Banwari Trace’s antiquity holds much significance for understanding
the migratory patterns of Archaic peoples from South America
into the Caribbean region. Given that related Archaic cultures
have been found on the adjacent mainland of South America, extending
for an indefinite distance on either side of the Orinoco Delta
in northeast South America (Rouse and Cruxent 1963: 58-59), it
is commonly assumed that this was the place of origin of those
Archaic peoples who migrated from South America to the West Indies.
As the oldest Archaic site in the West Indies, Banwari Trace
clearly indicates that southwest Trinidad was one of the first
migratory “stops” for northward-bound Archaic settlers
who eventually colonised several islands in the Caribbean archipelago.
The Physical Environment of Banwari Trace
The Banwari Trace deposit is to be found on the southern edge
of the Oropuche Lagoon in southwest Trinidad, just west of the
Coora River. The site occupies the top of a Miocene hillock,
originally covered with deciduous seasonal forest, which rises
above the swamp. Rouse (1992) classifies all of the Archaic sites
in the Lesser Antilles and Puerto Rico, including Banwari trace,
as belonging to the Ortoiroid Series, which gets its name from
the type site of Ortoire in Trinidad (Keegan 1994). Harris, who
dug a 2 x 2-m section (Excavation A) and an adjoining 2 x 1-m
section (Excavation B), excavated Banwari Trace in the centre
of the midden in 1969/1970 and 1971 respectively. The observed
change in shell-collecting habits of the Banwari Trace people
closely reflects the alteration in the natural environment, which
took place in the Oropuche Lagoon area during the period of midden
formation. It can be assumed that the Amerindians collected the
majority of shellfish deposited in the immediate surroundings
of the site. If so, the habitat preferences of the dominant shell
species at Banwari Trace further suggest that the Oropuche Lagoon
changed from a freshwater or slightly brackish lagoon to marine
mangrove swamp at about 6200/6100 BP.
The Material Culture of Banwari Trace
The Banwari Trace material culture shows a highly distinctive
cultural assemblage, typically consisting of artifacts made of
stones and bones. Objects associated with hunting and fishing
include bone projectile points, most likely used for tipping
arrows and fish spears, beveled peccary teeth used as fishhooks,
and bipointed pencil hooks of bone which were intended to be
attached in the middle to a fishing-line. A variety of ground
stone tools were manufactured for the processing of especially
vegetable foods, including blunt or pointed conical pestles,
large grinding stones and round to oval manos. The plant foods
processed at the Banwari sites are unknown, but they may have
included edible roots, palm starch and seeds (Boomert 2000).
The midden has also yielded a large variety of small, irregular
chips and cores manufactured of quartz, flint, chert and other
rock materials by percussion flaking. They include flake scrapers,
cutters, burins, small knives, blades and piercers which were
probably utilized for a multitude of purposes, e.g. the cutting
of meat, scaling of fish, prying open of shells, scraping of
skins, finishing of arrow shafts, and the processing of vegetable
fibres for the making of basketry.
Banwari Man – Trinidad’s Oldest Resident
In November 1969, the Trinidad and Tobago Historical Society
discovered the remains of a human skeleton at Banwari Trace.
Lying on its left-hand side, in a typical Amerindian “crouched” burial
position along a northwest axis (Harris 1978), Banwari Man (as
it is now commonly called) was found 20-cm below the surface.
Only two items were associated with the burial, a round pebble
by the skull and needlepoint by the hip. Banwari Man was apparently
interred in a shell midden and subsequently covered by shell
refuse. Based on its stratigraphic location in the site’s
archaeological deposits, the burial can be dated to the period
shortly before the end of occupation, approximately 3,400 BC
or 5,400 years old. Hailed as the oldest resident of Trinidad
(Harris 1978), Banwari Man is an important icon of Trinidad’s
early antiquity.
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