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Water Regimes and Infrastructures: A Transhistorical Archaeology of the Desaguadero River, Bolivia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 November 2024

Scott C. Smith
Affiliation:
Franklin & Marshall College PO Box 3003 Lancaster, PA 17604-3003 USA Email: scott.smith@fandm.edu
Maribel Pérez Arias
Affiliation:
The Stone Independent School 480 New Holland Ave #7101 Lancaster, PA 17602 USA Email: perezm@stoneindependent.org
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Abstract

This article uses tensions over the construction of a flow-regulation infrastructure built to control outflow from Lake Titicaca into the Desaguadero River, on the border between Peru and Bolivia, as a case study to explore the ways that relationships to water emerge and are contested. We argue that a nuanced understanding of tensions arising from this infrastructure requires us to recognize the long-term history of how the river accumulated practices, meanings and materials. Adapting the work of Arturo Escobar, we use the concept of ‘water regime’ to think about how engagements with the river are based in different spatiotemporal frameworks that have developed transhistorically and come into tension around the materiality and dynamism of the river itself.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Figure 0

Figure 1. Iruhito (A) and the Desaguadero River (B). (Photographs: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 2. Poster promoting international Uru summit. (Photograph: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 3. Maps showing (A) TDPS system; (B) location of Iruhito and places mentioned in the text. (Maps: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 4. Barracks used by engineers and workers who dredged the channel. (Photograph: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 5. Worldview 2 satellite image showing section of channel. (Map: S.C. Smith. Satellite imagery © 2019 DigitalGlobe, Incorporated.)

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Figure 6. Dam at Desaguadero. (Photograph: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 7. Contemporary camelid caravan near Qhunqhu Likiliki, Bolivia. (Photograph: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 8. Photograph (A) and painting (B) of chachapuma sculpture from Iruhito. (Photograph S.C. Smith. Original painting by Justin Nessly Allison, @jnesslya.)

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Figure 9. One of two burial chambers at Cerro Chijcha. (Photograph: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 10. Stands of totora reeds. (Photograph: S.C. Smith.)

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Figure 11. Painting on repurposed barracks in Iruhito. (Photograph: S.C. Smith.)