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Ancient American Cultures South America

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Cave Art in Brazil: Carbon dating suggests cave art from NE ... of camel hair, textile painting, the dying of camel hair and ... Spider. Tiahuanco. ca. 200 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ancient American Cultures South America


1
Ancient American CulturesSouth America
2
Evidence of Early Inhabitants
  • Cave Art in Brazil Carbon dating suggests cave
    art from NE Brazil is 32,000 years old -- much
    older than Lascaux and Altamira
  • LUZIA The oldest dated skeleton(11,500 years
    old) from the Americas, this young woman with
    African features may be part of the first wave of
    immigrants to South America.
  • Monte Verde Radiocarbon dating has put people at
    this campsite in south-central Chile around
    12,500 years ago

3
Evidence of Early Inhabitants
  • Aucilla River, Florida, ca. 10,200 bce Aucilla
    River Project website
  • Clovis Culture, ca. 9000 bce
  • North American skeltal remains
  • Spirit Caveman, ca. 7500 bce
  • Kennewick Man ca. 7300 bce
  • See websites
  • Nova Mystery of the First Americans
  • Center for the Study of the First Americans

The earliest artwork in North America is a
geometric design on an ivory shaft recovered in
the Aucilla River
Clovis tools, including spear points with a
fluted projectile point, were long considered the
Americas' oldest technology until such recent
discoveries as Aucilla River.
4
Major South American Cultures
  • CHAVÍN ca. 1000-200 bce
  • PARACAS-NAZCA ca. 500 bce-500 ce
  • TIAHUANCO ca. 200 bce-1200 ce
  • MOCHE ca. 100 bce-750 ce
  • INCA 1438-1532 ce

5
Moche
Chavin de Huantar
Paracas Nazca Tiahuanaco
6
Chavin Cultureca. 1000-200 bce
"Of all of the ancient cultures I admire, that of
Chavin amazes me the most. Actually, it has been
the inspiration behind most of my art" Pablo
Picasso
  • Elaborate ceramics, textiles, and sculpted stone
    found in larger sites throughout much of the
    Central Andes (modern day Peru) demonstrate a
    certain level of stylistic unity.
  • Little evidence has been found for the unified,
    bureaucratic, and military organization typical
    of evolved states

7
Chavín de Huantar
  • The major ceremonial center of the Chavín
  • 10,000 feet above sea level in the Andes
  • Chavín cult was an all-encompassing,
    cross-cultural success that spread throughout
    Peru
  • Animal deities
  • Hallucinogenic rituals
  • Search for religious ecstasy
  • Purification and penance rituals using hot
    pepper


8

Chavín Feline gods puma, jaguar
  • Clenched teeth and overlapping fangs
  • Ccao catlike spirit, roaming the Andes peaks,
    bringing hail and lightning and destroying crops

9
Chavin Metallurgy and Textiles
  • Advances in metallurgy also occurred during the
    Chavin's reign in Peru
  • Joining pieces of preshaped metal sheets to form
    both objects of art and of practicability
  • Soldering and temperature control.
  • Cloth production was revolutionized during the
    time of Chavin by new techniques and materials
    through the use of camel hair, textile painting,
    the dying of camel hair and the "resist" painting
    style similar to tie-dye

10
Chavin Heads
  • Large sculptured heads (some weighing half a ton)
    and the were-jaguar motif suggest similarities
    with the contemporary Central American Olmec
    culture

11
Paracas-Nazca Cultureca. 500 bce-500 ce
  • Nazca were the cultural descendants of Paracas
    culture headhunting fishermen who wove
    incredibly fine textiles for burial shrouds
  • Nazca burial sites revealed beautiful shrouds,
    gold ornaments, and feather fans
  • Excellent potters who brilliantly painted their
    ceramics
  • Practiced trepanning -- head surgery
  • Nazca created massive lines in the desert

12
Nazca Pottery
Spider
NazcaLines
Terracotta musician
13
Tiahuancoca. 200 bce-1200 ce
  • The capital of one of the greatest and most
    enduring of ancient empires.
  • During the height of its power, the Tiahuanaco
    empire covered large portions of Bolivia, NW
    Argentina, N Chile, and S Peru.
  • Remarkable agricultural system the raised-field
    system
  • raised planting surfaces separated by small
    irrigation canals
  • canals retained the heat of the intense sunlight
    during frosty nights on the Altiplano and kept
    the crops from freezing
  • Algae and aquatic plants that accumulated in the
    canals were used as organic fertilizer

14
VIRACOCHA
  • The religion centred around the cult of a sky and
    thunder god Viracocha.
  • His attendants were ranking deities in the shapes
    of cougar, condor, falcon and snake.
  • The deity was generally depicted as having staves
    in both of his hands and an aureole around his
    head.
  • Aureole sun god qualities
  • Staves suggest ancestry from the nearly
    thousand years older Chavín sky god in North
    Peru.

15
Mocheca. 100 bce-750 ce
  • Pyramid builders -- Pyramids of the Sun and
    Moon
  • Brilliant ceramic sculptures and pottery
  • Extensive trade networks
  • Authoritarian state with two distinct social
    classes
  • Ruling nobility
  • Commoners farmers, fishermen and craftsmen

16
Incan Civilization1438-1532
  • Heavily indebted to Chimu civilization and the
    Lords of Chan Chan
  • Master assimilationists
  • Reciprocity Mutual commitment between state and
    citizen
  • Mita labor tax
  • Master road builders
  • Gold artifacts

17
TawantinsuyuLand of the Four Quarters
  • Four roads, which went to the ends of each
    quarter, no matter how distant, came out of
    Cuzco each road bore the name of the suyu to
    which it ran.
  • 1) Anti-suyu included all the land east of Cuzco
  • 2) Cunti-suyu embraced all the lands west of
    Cuzco, including the conquered coastal empires,
    from Chan-Chan through the Rimac
  • 3) Colla-suyu was the largest in extent located
    south of Cuzco, it took in Lake Titicaca and
    regions in Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina.
  • 4) Chincha-suyu contained all the land and
    tribes which lay to the north, up to Rumichaca.
  • Each quarter was ruled by an apo, or governor,
    related by blood ties to the Inca

18
Inca 1438-1532
Incan Roads
Quipusdatabanks in colored knotted cords
Macchu Picchu
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