BC1500 S NorAme
BC1500 S NorAme
BC1500 S NorAme
CE
North
South-America
Introduction
Around
2000
BC
the
"Pre-‐Classic
Age"
of
Middle
America
traditionally
begins,
although
some
sources
make
it
start
around
2500BC
based
on
the
earliest
Maya
carbon
dating
on
the
oriental
side
of
Yucatan.
The
latter
is
supported
by
the
results
of
excavation
in
Belize,
dating
Maya
origins
around
2500BC
(1).
Hammond
and
colleagues
describe
a
pottery
called
"Swash"
found
in
burial
sites
with
human
skeletons.
Furthermore,
adults
show
tooth
wear,
suggesting
abrasives
in
the
diet:
grit
from
corn,
probably.
More
South,
in
Central
America
maize-‐farming
was
the
standard
by
1500
BC
and
the
farmers
lived
in
permanent
villages.
By
the
same
date
in
the
Tehuacan
Valley
of
Mexico,
there
was
complex
village
life,
pottery,
elaborated
religious
rituals
and
intricate
social
organization.
Each
village
contained
ten
to
twenty
houses,
each
representing
a
single
family
unit,
all
opening
into
a
common
plaza.
Recent
excavations
in
northern
Yucatan
indicate
that
sites
containing
the
largest
Mayan
cities
of
600CE
or
later
had
been
continuously
occupied
since
1500
BC.
Thus
Mayan
people
lived
there
with
an
ever-‐
increasing
level
of
civilization
for
over
2000
years.
However,
around
1500BC
the
Olmecs
arose
suddenly
in
the
region
boosting
the
evolution
of
local
cultures.
The
question
of
pre-‐Columbian
contacts
with
America
has
risen
particularly
regarding
this
advanced,
suddenly
appearing
Olmec
civilization.
Society,
technology
and
medicine
Olmecs
apparently
appeared
suddenly,
without
known
antecedents.
Olmecs
were
the
first
Meso-‐Americans
to
handle
large
masses
of
stone
in
monumental
sculptures
and
they
are
considered
responsible
for
extending
the
growth
of
maize
in
that
area.
Olmecs
were
an
hereditary
ruling
class
who
promoted
efficient
farming
techniques,
long
distance
trade
networks,
large
temples
and
public
buildings,
fine
art,
an
official
state
religion
and
social
stratification.
Like
the
Egyptians,
the
Olmecs
wrote
in
hieroglyphs,
developed
a
calendar
and
predicted
the
movements
of
planets.
They
built
flat-‐topped
pyramids
similar
to
the
ziggurats
of
Mesopotamia
and
decorated
those
with
basreliefs
showing
priests
with
Sumeric
faces
and
long
beards
(2).
There
is
even
some
botanical
evidence
of
European
contact.
The
Olmec
successors
wore
garments
from
a
strain
of
cotton
that
seemed
to
be
a
cross
between
a
local,
wild
type
and
the
long-‐staple
Egyptian
cotton.
The
Egyptian
variety
has
13
large
chromosomes
and
the
American
cotton
had
13
small
chromosomes
per
cell:
the
cotton
used
for
cloth
by
the
Olmecs
was
a
hybrid
of
the
two
and
contained
twenty-‐
six
chromosomes,
13
small
and
13
large.
It
is
disputed
whether
the
Olmecs
are
the
results
of
the
colonization
of
Phoenician
or
Egyptian
origin,
settling
at
the
terminus
of
the
strong
Atlantic
Canary
Current,
flowing
from
Africa
through
the
Canary
Islands
to
the
Gulf
of
Mexico
at
the
base
of
the
Yucatan
peninsula
(2).
Heyerdahl
(3)
lists
more
than
50
examples
of
similarities
to
civilizations
of
Asia
Minor
(e.g.
Hittite),
Cyprus
and
Crete
and
the
Olmecs.
These
include
priest-‐king
dynasties
in
sun-‐worshipping
cults,
brother-‐sister
royal
marriages,
fully
developed
script
writing,
paper
manufacture
from
vegetable
fibers,
stone
masonry
of
great
accuracy
without
the
use
of
mortar
and
with
methods
of
long
range
transportation
of
gigantic
stone
blocks,
colossal
stone
statues,
repetitive
representations
of
a
bearded
man
less
fighting
a
giant
snake
standing
on
its
tail
(all
true
Amerindians
of
Siberian
origin
are
beardless),
a
bird-‐man
standing
on
a
plumed
serpent,
construction
of
ziggurat
types
of
pyramids,
mummification
of
deceased
royalty,
trepanning
of
skulls,
circumcision
as
a
religious
ritual,
cities
of
adobe
houses
separated
by
streets
and
with
water
and
sewer
systems,
large
scale
terrace
agriculture
with
irrigation
and
fertilizers,
similar
cotton
looms
and
garments,
identical
leather
and
rope
sandals
even
if
useless
in
the
tropical
swamps,
feather
crowns
used
by
nobles,
similar
organization
of
standing
armies
and
weaponry,
similar
tools
and
utensils,
use
of
red
dyes
from
mollusks,
identical
stages
of
metallurgy
with
excellent
gold
work,
ceramic,
colored
funeral
ware
representing
clay
models
of
daily
life,
as
well
as
a
universal
female
goddess,
stamped
seals,
curved
wooden
figurines,
understanding
of
the
"zero"
concept,
remarkably
high
standard
of
calendar
system
and
finally
the
same
ocean-‐going
reed
ships
with
canvas
sail
hoisted
on
a
double-‐legged
mast.
In
any
case,
the
Olmec
civilization
was
a
center
for
controlling
the
trade
of
highland
raw
materials,
such
as
obsidian,
jade,
iron
and
cotton,
and
channeling
these
on
to
the
Gulf
coast
centers.
Contacts
with
nearby
Oaxaca
seem
to
have
stimulated
cultural
growth
there,
as
well.
Within
a
few
centuries,
Oaxaca,
with
its
vastly
greater
resources
and
richer
agricultural
possibilities,
with
irrigation,
actually
began
to
be
the
dominant
partner
(4).
Rough
history
in
10
points
n/a
3
people
of
the
time
n/a
Anecdote
The
origin
of
the
Olmec
people
is
attributed
to
the
mating
of
a
jaguar
with
a
proto-‐
Olmec
woman.
Kennedy
(5)
argues
whether
the
iconography
suggests
a
toad-‐like
deity
instead.
A
remarkable
finding
worth
mentioning
from
the
time
Mesoamerican
populations
are
known
to
have
played
a
ball
game.
The
game
used
a
rubber
ball
and
was
played
in
stone
ball
courts.
Players
were
divided
into
two
teams
and
faced
each
other
across
the
center
of
the
court.
These
players
could
not
touch
the
rubber
ball
with
their
hands,
instead,
they
wore
heavy
leather
and
wood
over
the
places
where
they
could
strike
the
ball:
their
hips
and
knees.
Their
hands
were
also
protected
against
scraping.
A
team
scored
points
when
the
opposing
team
failed
to
return
the
ball
or
when
the
ball
was
launched
into
the
opponents’
end
zone.
In
some
cases,
stone
or
wood
rings
were
placed
into
the
sides
of
the
court.
If
a
player
launched
the
ball
through
the
hole
in
the
ring
immediately
won
the
game.
An
exciting
spectator
game,
the
information
has
been
gathered
from
bas-‐reliefs
on
stone
benches
designed
to
host
the
public
during
the
matches.
References:
1. N.
Hammond
-‐
The
dawn
and
the
dusk:
beginning
and
ending
a
long-term
research
program
at
the
Preclassic
Maya
site
of
Cuello,
Belize
-‐
ANTHROPOLOGICAL
NOTEBOOKS
11:
45–60.
ISSN
1408-‐032X
2. T.
Heyerdahl
-‐
Early
Man
and
the
Ocean.
-‐
New
York,
1979
3. W.M.
Bray,
E.H.
Swanson,
I.S.
Farrington
–
The
new
world
-‐
Oxford:
Elsevier,
1975
4. DC
Grove
-‐
"Archeological
Investigations
at
Chalcatzingo,
1972,
1973."
-‐
National
Geographic
Reports,
1971,
National
Geographic
Society,
Washington
D.C
5. A.B.
Kennedy
–
“Ecce
Bufo:
The
Toad
in
Nature
and
in
Olmec
Iconography”
-‐
Current
Anthropology,
Vol.
23,
No.
3
(Jun.,
1982)
6. K
Blanchard,
AT
Cheska
–
“The
anthropology
of
sport”
-‐
Handbook
of
sports
studies,
2002