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Olmecs

The Olmecs (/ˈɒlmɛks, ˈl-/) were the earliest known major Mesoamerican civilization. Following a progressive development in Soconusco, they occupied the tropical lowlands of the modern-day Mexican states of Veracruz and Tabasco. It has been speculated that the Olmecs derived in part from the neighboring Mokaya or Mixe–Zoque cultures.

Olmecs
The Olmec heartland, where the Olmec reigned from 1400 to 400 BCE
Geographical rangeVeracruz, Mexico
PeriodPreclassic Era
Datesc. 1600 – 400 BCE
Type siteSan Lorenzo Tenochtitlán
Major sitesLa Venta, Tres Zapotes, Laguna de los Cerros
Preceded byArchaic Mesoamerica
Followed byEpi-Olmecs
Olmec artworks
Olmec Head No. 3 from San Lorenzo-Tenochtitlán; 1200–900 BCE; basalt; height: 1.8 m, length: 1.28 m, width: 0.83 m; Xalapa Museum of Anthropology (Xalapa, Mexico)
El Señor de las Limas; 1000–600 BCE; greenstone; height: 55 cm; Xalapa Museum of Anthropology
The Wrestler; 1200–400 BCE; basalt; height: 66 cm, from the Arroyo Sonso area (Veracruz, Mexico); Museo Nacional de Antropología. Olmec artists are known for both monumental and miniature portrayals of what are assumed to be persons of authority-from six-ton heads sculptures to figurines.

The Olmecs flourished during Mesoamerica's formative period, dating roughly from as early as 1500 BCE to about 400 BCE. Pre-Olmec cultures had flourished since about 2500 BCE, but by 1600–1500 BCE, early Olmec culture had emerged, centered on the San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán site near the coast in southeast Veracruz.[1] They were the first Mesoamerican civilization, and laid many of the foundations for the civilizations that followed.[2] Among other "firsts", the Olmec appeared to practice ritual bloodletting and played the Mesoamerican ballgame, hallmarks of nearly all subsequent Mesoamerican societies. The aspect of the Olmecs most familiar now is their artwork, particularly the aptly named "colossal heads".[3] The Olmec civilization was first defined through artifacts which collectors purchased on the pre-Columbian art market in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Olmec artworks are considered among ancient America's most striking.[4]

Etymology edit

The name "Olmec" means "rubber people" in Nahuatl, the language of the Nahuas, and was the Aztec Empire term for the people who lived in the Gulf Lowlands in the 15th and 16th centuries, some 2000 years after the Olmec culture died out. The term "Rubber People" refers to the ancient practice, spanning from ancient Olmecs to Aztecs, of extracting latex from Castilla elastica, a rubber tree in the area. The juice of a local vine, Ipomoea alba, was then mixed with this latex to create rubber as early as 1600 BCE.[5] The Nahuatl word for the Olmecs was Ōlmēcatl [oːlˈmeːkat͡ɬ] (singular) or Ōlmēcah [oːlˈmeːkaʔ] (plural). This word is composed of the two words ōlli [ˈoːlːi], meaning "natural rubber", and mēcatl [ˈmeːkat͡ɬ], meaning "people".[6][7]

Early modern explorers and archaeologists, however, mistakenly applied the name "Olmec" to the rediscovered ruins and artifacts in the heartland decades before it was understood that these were not created by the people the Aztecs knew as the "Olmec", but rather a culture that was 2000 years older. Despite the mistaken identity, the name has stuck.[8]

It is not known what name the ancient Olmec used for themselves; some later Mesoamerican accounts seem to refer to the ancient Olmec as "Tamoanchan".[9] A contemporary term sometimes used for the Olmec culture is tenocelome, meaning "mouth of the jaguar".[10]

Overview edit

The Olmec heartland is the area in the Gulf lowlands where it expanded after early development in Soconusco, Veracruz. This area is characterized by swampy lowlands punctuated by low hills, ridges, and volcanoes. The Sierra de los Tuxtlas rises sharply in the north, along the Gulf of Mexico's Bay of Campeche. Here, the Olmec constructed permanent city-temple complexes at San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán, La Venta, Tres Zapotes, and Laguna de los Cerros. In this region, the first Mesoamerican civilization emerged and reigned from c. 1400–400 BCE.[11]

Origins edit

The beginnings of Olmec civilization have traditionally been placed between 1400 BCE and 1200 BCE. Past finds of Olmec remains ritually deposited at the shrine El Manatí near the triple archaeological sites known collectively as San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán moved this back to "at least" 1600–1500 BCE.[12] It seems that the Olmec had their roots in early farming cultures of Tabasco, which began between 5100 BCE and 4600 BCE. These shared the same basic food crops and technologies of the later Olmec civilization.[13]

What is today called Olmec first appeared fully within San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán, where distinctive Olmec features occurred around 1400 BCE. The rise of civilization was assisted by the local ecology of well-watered alluvial soil, as well as by the transportation network provided by the Coatzacoalcos river basin. This environment may be compared to that of other ancient centers of civilization: the Nile, Indus, and Yellow River valleys and Mesopotamia. This highly productive environment encouraged a densely concentrated population, which in turn triggered the rise of an elite class.[14] The elite class created the demand for the production of the symbolic and sophisticated luxury artifacts that define Olmec culture.[15] Many of these luxury artifacts were made from materials such as jade, obsidian, and magnetite, which came from distant locations and suggest that early Olmec elites had access to an extensive trading network in Mesoamerica. The source of the most valued jade was the Motagua River valley in eastern Guatemala,[16] and Olmec obsidian has been traced to sources in the Guatemala highlands, such as El Chayal and San Martín Jilotepeque, or in Puebla,[17] distances ranging from 200 to 400 km (120–250 miles) away, respectively.[18]

The state of Guerrero, and in particular its early Mezcala culture, seem to have played an important role in the early history of Olmec culture. Olmec-style artifacts tend to appear earlier in some parts of Guerrero than in the Veracruz-Tabasco area. In particular, the relevant objects from the Amuco-Abelino site in Guerrero reveal dates as early as 1530 BCE.[19] The city of Teopantecuanitlan in Guerrero is also relevant in this regard.

La Venta edit

 
Great pyramid in La Venta, Tabasco

The first Olmec center, San Lorenzo, was all but abandoned around 900 BCE at about the same time that La Venta rose to prominence.[20] A wholesale destruction of many San Lorenzo monuments also occurred c. 950s BCE, which may indicate an internal uprising or, less likely, an invasion.[21] The latest thinking, however, is that environmental changes may have been responsible for this shift in Olmec centers, with certain important rivers changing course.[22]

In any case, following the decline of San Lorenzo, La Venta became the most prominent Olmec center, lasting from 900 BCE until its abandonment around 400 BCE.[23] La Venta sustained the Olmec cultural traditions with spectacular displays of power and wealth. The Great Pyramid was the largest Mesoamerican structure of its time. Even today, after 2500 years of erosion, it rises 34 m (112 ft) above the naturally flat landscape.[24] Buried deep within La Venta lay opulent, labor-intensive "offerings" – 1000 tons of smooth serpentine blocks, large mosaic pavements, and at least 48 separate votive offerings of polished jade celts, pottery, figurines, and hematite mirrors.[25]

Decline edit

Scholars have yet to determine the cause of the eventual extinction of the Olmec culture. Between 400 and 350 BCE, the population in the eastern half of the Olmec heartland dropped precipitously, and the area was sparsely inhabited until the 19th century.[26] According to archaeologists, this depopulation was probably the result of "very serious environmental changes that rendered the region unsuited for large groups of farmers", in particular changes to the riverine environment that the Olmec depended upon for agriculture, hunting and gathering, and transportation. These changes may have been triggered by tectonic upheavals or subsidence, or the siltation of rivers due to agricultural practices.[27]

One theory for the considerable population drop during the Terminal Formative period is suggested by Santley and colleagues (Santley et al. 1997), who propose the relocation of settlements due to volcanism, instead of extinction. Volcanic eruptions during the Early, Late and Terminal Formative periods would have blanketed the lands and forced the Olmec to move their settlements.[28]

Whatever the cause, within a few hundred years of the abandonment of the last Olmec cities, successor cultures became firmly established. The Tres Zapotes site, on the western edge of the Olmec heartland, continued to be occupied well past 400 BCE, but without the hallmarks of the Olmec culture. This post-Olmec culture, often labeled the Epi-Olmec, has features similar to those found at Izapa, some 550 kilometres (340 mi) to the southeast.[29]

Artifacts edit

 
Seated figurine; 12th–9th century BC; painted ceramic; height: 34 cm, width: 31.8 cm, depth: 14.6 cm; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City)
 
Bird-shaped vessel; 12th–9th century BC; ceramic with red ochre; height: 16.5 cm; Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Olmec culture was first defined as an art style, and this continues to be the hallmark of the culture.[30] Wrought in a large number of media – jade, clay, basalt, and greenstone among others – much Olmec art, such as The Wrestler, is naturalistic. Other art expresses fantastic anthropomorphic creatures, often highly stylized, using an iconography reflective of a religious meaning.[31] Common motifs include downturned mouths and a cleft head, both of which are seen in representations of werejaguars.[30] In addition to making human and human-like subjects, Olmec artisans were adept at animal portrayals.

While Olmec figurines are found abundantly in sites throughout the Formative Period, the stone monuments such as the colossal heads are the most recognizable feature of Olmec culture.[32] These monuments can be divided into four classes:[33]

  • Colossal heads (which can be up to 3 m (10 ft) tall);
  • Rectangular "altars" (more likely thrones) [34] such as Altar 5 shown below;
  • Free-standing in-the-round sculpture, such as the twins from El Azuzul or San Martín Pajapan Monument 1; and
  • Stele, such as La Venta Monument 19 above. The stelae form was generally introduced later than the colossal heads, altars, or free-standing sculptures. Over time, the stele changed from simple representation of figures, such as Monument 19 or La Venta Stela 1, toward representations of historical events, particularly acts legitimizing rulers. This trend would culminate in post-Olmec monuments such as La Mojarra Stela 1, which combines images of rulers with script and calendar dates.[35]

Colossal heads edit

The most recognized aspect of the Olmec civilization are the enormous helmeted heads.[36] As no known pre-Columbian text explains them, these impressive monuments have been the subject of much speculation. Once theorized to be ballplayers, it is now generally accepted that these heads are portraits of rulers, perhaps dressed as ballplayers.[37] Infused with individuality, no two heads are alike and the helmet-like headdresses are adorned with distinctive elements, suggesting personal or group symbols. Some have also speculated that Mesoamerican people believed that the soul, along with all of one's experiences and emotions, was contained inside the head.[38][39]

Seventeen colossal heads have been unearthed to date.[40]

Site Count Designations
San Lorenzo 10 Colossal Heads 1 through 10
La Venta 4 Monuments 1 through 4
Tres Zapotes 2 Monuments A & Q
Rancho la Cobata 1 Monument 1
 
Tuxtla statuette

The heads range in size from the Rancho La Cobata head, at 3.4 m (11 ft) high, to the pair at Tres Zapotes, at 1.47 m (4 ft 10 in). Scholars calculate that the largest heads weigh between 25 and 55 tonnes (28 and 61 short tons).[41]

 
One of the mosaics from the La Venta Olmec site.

The heads were carved from single blocks or boulders of volcanic basalt, found in the Sierra de los Tuxtlas. The Tres Zapotes heads, for example, were sculpted from basalt found at the summit of Cerro el Vigía, at the western end of the Tuxtlas. The San Lorenzo and La Venta heads, on the other hand, were probably carved from the basalt of Cerro Cintepec, on the southeastern side,[42] perhaps at the nearby Llano del Jicaro workshop, and dragged or floated to their final destination dozens of miles away.[43] It has been estimated that moving a colossal head required the efforts of 1,500 people for three to four months.[18]

Some of the heads, and many other monuments, have been variously mutilated, buried and disinterred, reset in new locations and/or reburied. Some monuments, and at least two heads, were recycled or recarved, but it is not known whether this was simply due to the scarcity of stone or whether these actions had ritual or other connotations. Scholars believe that some mutilation had significance beyond mere destruction, but some scholars still do not rule out internal conflicts or, less likely, invasion as a factor.[44]

The flat-faced, thick-lipped heads have caused some debate due to their resemblance to some African facial characteristics. Based on this comparison, some writers have said that the Olmecs were Africans who had emigrated to the New World.[45] But the vast majority of archaeologists and other Mesoamerican scholars reject claims of pre-Columbian contacts with Africa.[46] Explanations for the facial features of the colossal heads include the possibility that the heads were carved in this manner due to the shallow space allowed on the basalt boulders. Others note that in addition to the broad noses and thick lips, the eyes of the heads often show the epicanthic fold, and that all these characteristics can still be found in modern Mesoamerican Indians. For instance, in the 1940s, the artist/art historian Miguel Covarrubias published a series of photos of Olmec artworks and of the faces of modern Mexican Indians with very similar facial characteristics.[47] The African origin hypothesis assumes that Olmec carving was intended to be a representation of the inhabitants, an assumption that is hard to justify given the full corpus of representation in Olmec carving.[48]

Ivan Van Sertima claimed that the seven braids on the Tres Zapotes head was an Ethiopian hair style, but he offered no evidence it was a contemporary style. The Egyptologist Frank J. Yurco has said that the Olmec braids do not resemble contemporary Egyptian or Nubian braids.[49]

Richard Diehl wrote "There can be no doubt that the heads depict the American Indian physical type still seen on the streets of Soteapan, Acayucan, and other towns in the region."[50]

Jade face masks edit

Another type of artifact is much smaller; hardstone carvings in jade of a face in a mask form. Jade is a particularly precious material, and it was used as a mark of rank by the ruling classes.[51] By 1500 BCE early Olmec sculptors mastered the human form.[38] This can be determined by wooden Olmec sculptures discovered in the swampy bogs of El Manati.[38] Before radiocarbon dating could tell the exact age of Olmec pieces, archaeologists and art historians noticed the unique "Olmec-style" in a variety of artifacts.[38]

Curators and scholars refer to "Olmec-style" face masks but, to date, no example has been recovered in an archaeologically controlled Olmec context. They have been recovered from sites of other cultures, including one deliberately deposited in the ceremonial altepetl (precinct) of Tenochtitlan in what is now Mexico City. The mask would presumably have been about 2000 years old when the Aztecs buried it, suggesting such masks were valued and collected as were Roman antiquities in Europe.[52] The 'Olmec-style' refers to the combination of deep-set eyes, nostrils, and strong, slightly asymmetrical mouth.[38] The "Olmec-style" also very distinctly combines facial features of both humans and jaguars.[53] Olmec arts are strongly tied to the Olmec religion, which prominently featured jaguars.[53] The Olmec people believed that in the distant past a race of werejaguars was made between the union of a jaguar and a woman.[53] One werejaguar quality that can be found is the sharp cleft in the forehead of many supernatural beings in Olmec art. This sharp cleft is associated with the natural indented head of jaguars.[53]

Kunz axes edit

The Kunz axes (also known as "votive axes") are figures that represent werejaguars and were apparently used for rituals. In most cases, the head is half the total volume of the figure. All Kunz axes have flat noses and an open mouth. The name "Kunz" comes from George Frederick Kunz, an American mineralogist, who described a figure in 1890.

Beyond the heartland edit

 
The major Formative Period (Pre-Classic Era) sites in present-day Mexico which show Olmec influences in the archaeological record.

Olmec-style artifacts, designs, figurines, monuments and iconography have been found in the archaeological records of sites hundreds of kilometres outside the Olmec heartland. These sites include:[54]

Central Mexico edit

Tlatilco and Tlapacoya, major centers of the Tlatilco culture in the Valley of Mexico, where artifacts include hollow baby-face motif figurines and Olmec designs on ceramics.

Chalcatzingo, in Valley of Morelos, central Mexico, which features Olmec-style monumental art and rock art with Olmec-style figures.

Also, in 2007, archaeologists unearthed Zazacatla, an Olmec-influenced city in Morelos. Located about 40 kilometres (25 mi) south of Mexico City, Zazacatla covered about 2.5 square kilometres (1 sq mi) between 800 and 500 BCE.[55]

Western Mexico edit

Teopantecuanitlan, in Guerrero, which features Olmec-style monumental art as well as city plans with distinctive Olmec features.

Also, the Juxtlahuaca and Oxtotitlán cave paintings feature Olmec designs and motifs.[56]

Southern Mexico and Guatemala edit

Olmec influence is also seen at several sites in the Southern Maya area.

In Guatemala, sites showing probable Olmec influence include San Bartolo, Takalik Abaj and La Democracia.

Nature of interaction edit

Many theories have been advanced to account for the occurrence of Olmec influence far outside the heartland, including long-range trade by Olmec merchants, Olmec colonization of other regions, Olmec artisans travelling to other cities, conscious imitation of Olmec artistic styles by developing towns – some even suggest the prospect of Olmec military domination or that the Olmec iconography was actually developed outside the heartland.[57]

The generally accepted, but by no means unanimous, interpretation is that the Olmec-style artifacts, in all sizes, became associated with elite status and were adopted by non-Olmec Formative Period chieftains in an effort to bolster their status.[58]

Notable innovations edit

In addition to their influence with contemporaneous Mesoamerican cultures, as the first civilization in Mesoamerica, the Olmecs are credited, or speculatively credited, with many "firsts", including the bloodletting and perhaps human sacrifice, writing and epigraphy, and the invention of popcorn, zero and the Mesoamerican calendar, and the Mesoamerican ballgame, as well as perhaps the compass.[59] Some researchers, including artist and art historian Miguel Covarrubias, even postulate that the Olmecs formulated the forerunners of many of the later Mesoamerican deities.[60]

Bloodletting and sacrifice speculation edit

 
Altar 5 from La Venta. The inert were-jaguar baby held by the central figure is seen by some as an indication of child sacrifice. In contrast, its sides show bas-reliefs of humans holding quite lively were-jaguar babies.

Although the archaeological record does not include explicit representation of Olmec bloodletting,[61] researchers have found other evidence that the Olmec ritually practiced it. For example, numerous natural and ceramic stingray spikes and maguey thorns have been found at Olmec sites,[62] and certain artifacts have been identified as bloodletters.[63]

The argument that the Olmec instituted human sacrifice is significantly more speculative. No Olmec or Olmec-influenced sacrificial artifacts have yet been discovered; no Olmec or Olmec-influenced artwork unambiguously shows sacrificial victims (as do the danzante figures of Monte Albán) or scenes of human sacrifice (such as can be seen in the famous ballcourt mural from El Tajín).[64]

At El Manatí, disarticulated skulls and femurs, as well as the complete skeletons of newborns or fetuses, have been discovered amidst the other offerings, leading to speculation concerning infant sacrifice. Scholars have not determined how the infants met their deaths.[65] Some authors have associated infant sacrifice with Olmec ritual art showing limp werejaguar babies, most famously in La Venta's Altar 5 (on the right) or Las Limas figure.[66] Any definitive answer requires further findings.

Writing edit

The Olmec may have been the first civilization in the Western Hemisphere to develop a writing system. Symbols found in 2002 and 2006 date from 650 BCE[67] and 900 BCE[68] respectively, preceding the oldest Zapotec writing found so far, which dates from about 500 BCE.[69][70]

The 2002 find at the San Andrés site shows a bird, speech scrolls, and glyphs that are similar to the later Maya script.[71] Known as the Cascajal Block, and dated between 1100 BCE and 900 BCE, the 2006 find from a site near San Lorenzo shows a set of 62 symbols, 28 of which are unique, carved on a serpentine block. A large number of prominent archaeologists have hailed this find as the "earliest pre-Columbian writing".[72] Others are skeptical because of the stone's singularity, the fact that it had been removed from any archaeological context, and because it bears no apparent resemblance to any other Mesoamerican writing system.[73]

There are also well-documented later hieroglyphs known as the Isthmian script, and while there are some who believe that the Isthmian may represent a transitional script between an earlier Olmec writing system and the Maya script, the matter remains unsettled.

Mesoamerican Long Count calendar and invention of the zero concept edit

 
The back of Stela C from Tres Zapotes
This is the second oldest Long Count date yet discovered. The numerals 7.16.6.16.18 translate to 3 September 32 BCE (Julian). The glyphs surrounding the date are one of the few surviving examples of Epi-Olmec script.[74]

The Long Count calendar used by many subsequent Mesoamerican civilizations, as well as the concept of zero, may have been devised by the Olmecs. Because the six artifacts with the earliest Long Count calendar dates were all discovered outside the immediate Maya homeland, it is likely that this calendar predated the Maya and was possibly the invention of the Olmecs. Indeed, three of these six artifacts were found within the Olmec heartland. But an argument against an Olmec origin is the fact that the Olmec civilization had ended by the 4th century BCE, several centuries before the earliest known Long Count date artifact.[75]

The Long Count calendar required the use of zero as a place-holder within its vigesimal (base-20) positional numeral system. A shell glyph –  – was used as a zero symbol for these Long Count dates, the second oldest of which, on Stela C at Tres Zapotes, has a date of 32 BCE. This is one of the earliest uses of the zero concept in history.[76]

Mesoamerican ballgame edit

The Olmec are strong candidates for originating the Mesoamerican ballgame so prevalent among later cultures of the region and used for recreational and religious purposes.[77] A dozen rubber balls dating to 1600 BCE or earlier have been found in El Manatí, a bog 10 km (6 mi) east of San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan.[78] These balls predate the earliest ballcourt yet discovered at Paso de la Amada, c. 1400 BCE, although there is no certainty that they were used in the ballgame.[79]

Ethnicity and language edit

 
Olmec tomb at La Venta Park, Villahermosa, Tabasco.

While the actual ethno-linguistic affiliation of the Olmec remains unknown, various hypotheses have been put forward. For example, in 1968 Michael D. Coe speculated that the Olmec were Maya predecessors.[80]

In 1976, linguists Lyle Campbell and Terrence Kaufman published a paper in which they argued a core number of loanwords had apparently spread from a Mixe–Zoquean language into many other Mesoamerican languages.[81] Campbell and Kaufman proposed that the presence of these core loanwords indicated that the Olmec – generally regarded as the first "highly civilized" Mesoamerican society – spoke a language ancestral to Mixe–Zoquean. The spread of this vocabulary particular to their culture accompanied the diffusion of other Olmec cultural and artistic traits that appears in the archaeological record of other Mesoamerican societies.

Mixe–Zoque specialist Søren Wichmann first critiqued this theory on the basis that most of the Mixe–Zoquean loans seemed to originate only from the Zoquean branch of the family. This implied the loanword transmission occurred in the period after the two branches of the language family split, placing the time of the borrowings outside of the Olmec period.[82] However, new evidence has pushed back the proposed date for the split of Mixean and Zoquean languages to a period within the Olmec era.[83] Based on this dating, the architectural and archaeological patterns and the particulars of the vocabulary loaned to other Mesoamerican languages from Mixe–Zoquean, Wichmann now suggests that the Olmecs of San Lorenzo spoke proto-Mixe and the Olmecs of La Venta spoke proto-Zoque.[83]

At least the fact that the Mixe–Zoquean languages are still spoken in an area corresponding roughly to the Olmec heartland, and are historically known to have been spoken there, leads most scholars to assume that the Olmec spoke one or more Mixe–Zoquean languages.[84]

Religion and mythology edit

 
Olmec Chief or King. Relief from La Venta Archaeological Site in Tabasco.

Olmec religious activities were performed by a combination of rulers, full-time priests, and shamans. The rulers seem to have been the most important religious figures, with their links to the Olmec deities or supernaturals providing legitimacy for their rule.[85] There is also considerable evidence for shamans in the Olmec archaeological record, particularly in the so-called "transformation figures".[86]

As Olmec mythology has left no documents comparable to the Popol Vuh from Maya mythology, any exposition of Olmec mythology must be based on interpretations of surviving monumental and portable art (such as the Señor de Las Limas statue at the Xalapa Museum), and comparisons with other Mesoamerican mythologies. Olmec art shows that such deities as Feathered Serpent and a rain supernatural were already in the Mesoamerican pantheon in Olmec times.[87]

Social and political organization edit

Little is directly known about the societal or political structure of Olmec society. Although it is assumed by most researchers that the colossal heads and several other sculptures represent rulers, nothing has been found like the Maya stelae which name specific rulers and provide the dates of their rule.[88]

Instead, archaeologists relied on the data that they had, such as large- and small-scale site surveys. These provided evidence of considerable centralization within the Olmec region, first at San Lorenzo and then at La Venta – no other Olmec sites come close to these in terms of area or in the quantity and quality of architecture and sculpture.[89]

This evidence of geographic and demographic centralization leads archaeologists to propose that Olmec society itself was hierarchical, concentrated first at San Lorenzo and then at La Venta, with an elite that was able to use their control over materials such as water and monumental stone to exert command and legitimize their regime.[90]

Nonetheless, Olmec society is thought to lack many of the institutions of later civilizations, such as a standing army or priestly caste.[91] And there is no evidence that San Lorenzo or La Venta controlled, even during their heyday, all of the Olmec heartland.[92] There is some doubt, for example, that La Venta controlled even Arroyo Sonso, only some 35 km (22 mi) away.[93] Studies of the Sierra de los Tuxtlas settlements, some 60 km (35 mi) away, indicate that this area was composed of more or less egalitarian communities outside the control of lowland centers.[94]

Trade edit

The wide diffusion of Olmec artifacts and "Olmecoid" iconography throughout much of Mesoamerica indicates the existence of extensive long-distance trade networks. Exotic, prestigious and high-value materials such as greenstone and marine shell were moved in significant quantities across large distances. Some of the reasons for trade revolve around the lack of obsidian in the heartland. The Olmec used obsidian in many tools because worked edges were very sharp and durable. Most of the obsidian found has been traced back to Guatemala showing the extensive trade.[95] While the Olmec were not the first in Mesoamerica to organize long-distance exchanges of goods, the Olmec period saw a significant expansion in interregional trade routes, more variety in material goods exchanged and a greater diversity in the sources from which the base materials were obtained.

Village life and diet edit

Despite their size and deliberate urban design, which was copied by other centers,[96] San Lorenzo and La Venta were largely ceremonial centers, and the majority of the Olmec lived in villages similar to present-day villages and hamlets in Tabasco and Veracruz.[97]

These villages were located on higher ground and consisted of several scattered houses. A modest temple may have been associated with the larger villages. The individual dwellings would consist of a house, an associated lean-to, and one or more storage pits (similar in function to a root cellar). A nearby garden was used for medicinal and cooking herbs and for smaller crops, such as the domesticated sunflower. Fruit trees, such as avocado or cacao, were probably available nearby.

Although the river banks were used to plant crops between flooding periods, the Olmecs probably also practiced slash-and-burn agriculture to clear the forests and shrubs, and to provide new fields once the old fields were exhausted.[98] Fields were located outside the village, and were used for maize, beans, squash, cassava, and sweet potato. Based on archaeological studies of two villages in the Tuxtlas Mountains, it is known that maize cultivation became increasingly important to the Olmec over time, although the diet remained fairly diverse.[99]

The fruits and vegetables were supplemented with fish, turtle, snake, and mollusks from the nearby rivers, and crabs and shellfish in the coastal areas. Birds were available as food sources, as were game including peccary, opossum, raccoon, rabbit, and in particular, deer.[100] Despite the wide range of hunting and fishing available, midden surveys in San Lorenzo have found that the domesticated dog was the single most plentiful source of animal protein.[101]

History of archaeological research edit

 
Kunz Axe; 1000-400 BCE; jadeite; height: 31 cm (12316 in.), width 16 cm (6516 in.), 11 cm (4516 in.); American Museum of Natural History (New York, NY, USA). The jade Kunz Axe, first described by George Kunz in 1890. Although shaped like an axe head, with an edge along the bottom, it is unlikely that this artifact was used except in ritual settings. At a height of 28 cm (11 in), it is one of the largest jade objects ever found in Mesoamerica.[102]

Olmec culture was unknown to historians until the mid-19th century. In 1869, the Mexican antiquarian traveller José Melgar y Serrano published a description of the first Olmec monument to have been found in situ. This monument – the colossal head now labelled Tres Zapotes Monument A – had been discovered in the late 1850s by a farm worker clearing forested land on a hacienda in Veracruz. Hearing about the curious find while travelling through the region, Melgar y Serrano first visited the site in 1862 to see for himself and complete the partially exposed sculpture's excavation. His description of the object, published several years later after further visits to the site, represents the earliest documented report of an artifact of what is now known as the Olmec culture.[103]

In the latter half of the 19th century, Olmec artifacts such as the Kunz Axe (right) came to light and were subsequently recognized as belonging to a unique artistic tradition.

Frans Blom and Oliver La Farge made the first detailed descriptions of La Venta and San Martin Pajapan Monument 1 during their 1925 expedition. However, at this time, most archaeologists assumed the Olmec were contemporaneous with the Maya – even Blom and La Farge were, in their own words, "inclined to ascribe them to the Maya culture".[104]

Matthew Stirling of the Smithsonian Institution conducted the first detailed scientific excavations of Olmec sites in the 1930s and 1940s. Stirling, along with art historian Miguel Covarrubias, became convinced that the Olmec predated most other known Mesoamerican civilizations.[105]

In counterpoint to Stirling, Covarrubias, and Alfonso Caso, however, Mayanists J. Eric Thompson and Sylvanus Morley argued for Classic-era dates for the Olmec artifacts. The question of Olmec chronology came to a head at a 1942 Tuxtla Gutierrez conference, where Alfonso Caso declared that the Olmecs were the "mother culture" ("cultura madre") of Mesoamerica.[106]

Shortly after the conference, radiocarbon dating proved the antiquity of the Olmec civilization, although the "mother culture" question generated considerable debate even 60 years later.[107]

DNA edit

In the investigations of the San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán Archaeological Project at the sites of San Lorenzo and Loma del Zapote, several human burials from the Olmec period were found. The bone consistency in two of them allowed the study of their mitochondrial DNA to be carried out successfully, as part of an investigation that proposes the comparative analysis of the genetic information of the Olmecs with that obtained from subjects from other Mesoamerican societies under the advice of the specialists Dr. María de Lourdes Muñoz Moreno and Miguel Moreno Galeana, both at CINVESTAV in Mexico.

This pioneering study of mitochondrial DNA in 2018 was carried out on two Olmec individuals, one from San Lorenzo and the other from Loma del Zapote, resulted, in both cases, in the unequivocal presence of the distinctive mutations of the haplogroup A maternal lineage. They share the most abundant of the five mitochondrial haplogroups characteristic of the indigenous populations of the Americas: A, B, C, D and X.[108][109]

Alternative origin speculations edit

Partly because the Olmecs developed the first Mesoamerican civilization, and partly because little is known of them compared to, for example, the Maya or Aztec, a number of Olmec alternative origin speculations have been put forth. Although several of these speculations, particularly the theory that the Olmecs were of African origin popularized by Ivan Van Sertima's book They Came Before Columbus, have become well known within popular culture, they are not considered credible by the vast majority of Mesoamerican researchers and scientists, who discard them as pop-culture pseudo-science.[110]

As of 2018, mitochondrial DNA study carried out on Olmec remains, one from San Lorenzo and the other from Loma del Zapote, resulted, in both cases, in the “unequivocal presence of the distinctive mutations of the “A” maternal lineage. That is, the origin of the Olmecs is not in Africa but in America, since they share the most abundant of the five mitochondrial haplogroups characteristic of the indigenous populations of our continent: A, B, C, D and X.”[3] 27 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine

Gallery edit

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Diehl, Richard A. (2004). The Olmecs : America's First Civilization. London: Thames and Hudson. pp. 9–25. ISBN 0-500-28503-9.
  2. ^ See Pool (2007) p. 2. Although there is wide agreement that the Olmec culture helped lay the foundations for the civilizations that followed, there is disagreement over the extent of the Olmec contributions, and even a proper definition of the Olmec "culture". See "Olmec influences on Mesoamerican cultures" for a deeper treatment of this question.
  3. ^ See, as one example, Diehl, p. 11.
  4. ^ See Diehl, p. 108 for the "ancient America" superlatives. The artist and archaeologist Miguel Covarrubias (1957) p. 50 says that Olmec pieces are among the world's masterpieces
  5. ^ Rubber Processing, MIT.
  6. ^ Olmecas (n.d.). Think Quest. Retrieved 20 September 2012, from link 24 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Coe (1968) p. 42
  8. ^ Diehl, p. 14.
  9. ^ Coe (2002) refers to an old Nahuatl poem cited by Miguel Leon-Portilla, which itself refers to a land called "Tamoanchan":

    in a certain era
    which no one can reckon
    which no one can remember
    [where] there was a government for a long time".

    Coe interprets Tamoanchan as a Mayan language word meaning 'Land of Rain or Mist' (p. 61).
  10. ^ The term "tenocelome" is used as early as 1967 by George Kubler in American Anthropologist, v. 69, p. 404.
  11. ^ Dates from Pool, p. 1. Diehl gives a slightly earlier date of 1500 BCE (p. 9), but the same end-date. Any dates for the start of the Olmec civilization or culture are problematic as its rise was a gradual process. Most Olmec dates are based on radiocarbon dating (see e.g. Diehl, p. 10), which is only accurate within a given range (e.g. ±90 years in the case of early El Manatí layers), and much is still to be learned concerning early Gulf lowland settlements.
  12. ^ Richard A Diehl, 2004, The Olmecs – America's First Civilization London: Thames & Hudson, pp. 25, 27.
  13. ^ Diehl, 2004: pp. 23–24.
  14. ^ Beck, Roger B.; Linda Black; Larry S. Krieger; Phillip C. Naylor; Dahia Ibo Shabaka (1999). World History: Patterns of Interaction. Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell. ISBN 0-395-87274-X.
  15. ^ Pool, pp. 26–27, provides a great overview of this theory, and says: "The generation of food surpluses is necessary for the development of social and political hierarchies and there is no doubt that high agricultural productivity, combined with the natural abundance of aquatic foods in the Gulf lowlands supported their growth."
  16. ^ Pool, p. 151.
  17. ^ Diehl, p. 132, or Pool, p. 150.
  18. ^ a b Pool, p. 103.
  19. ^ Evans, Susan Toby; Webster, David L. (2000). Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. p. 315. ISBN 978-1-136-80185-3.
  20. ^ Diehl, p. 9.
  21. ^ Coe (1967), p. 72. Alternatively, the mutilation of these monuments may be unrelated to the decline and abandonment of San Lorenzo. Some researchers believe that the mutilation had ritualistic aspects, particularly since most mutilated monuments were reburied in a row.
  22. ^ Pool, p. 135. Diehl, pp. 58–59, 82.
  23. ^ Diehl, p. 9. Pool gives dates 1000 BCE – 400 BCE for La Venta.
  24. ^ Pool, p. 157.
  25. ^ Pool, p. 161–162.
  26. ^ Diehl, p. 82. Nagy, p. 270, however, is more circumspect, stating that in the Grijalva river delta, on the eastern edge of the heartland, "the local population had significantly declined in apparent population density ... A low-density Late Preclassic and Early Classic occupation . . . may have existed; however, it remains invisible."
  27. ^ Quote and analysis from Diehl, p. 82, echoed in other works such as Pool.
  28. ^ Vanderwarker (2006) pp. 50–51
  29. ^ Coe (2002), p. 88.
  30. ^ a b Coe (2002), p. 62.
  31. ^ Coe (2002), p. 88 and others.
  32. ^ Pool, p. 105.
  33. ^ Pool, p. 106. Diehl, pp. 109–115.
  34. ^ Grove, 1973.
  35. ^ Pool, pp. 106–108, 176.
  36. ^ Diehl, p. 111.
  37. ^ Pool, p. 118; Diehl, p. 112. Coe (2002), p. 69: "They wear headgear rather like American football helmets which probably served as protection in both war and in the ceremonial game played...throughout Mesoamerica."
  38. ^ a b c d e Miller, Mary Ellen. "The Art of Mesoamerica From Olmec to Aztec." Thames & Hudson; 4th edition (20 October 2006).
  39. ^ Grove, p. 55.
  40. ^ Pool, p. 107.
  41. ^ In particular, Williams and Heizer (p. 29) calculated the weight of San Lorenzo Colossal Head 1 at 25.3 short tons, or 23 tonnes. See Scarre. pp. 271–274 for the "55 tonnes" weight.
  42. ^ See Williams and Heizer for more detail.
  43. ^ Scarre. Pool, p. 129.
  44. ^ Diehl, p. 119.
  45. ^ Wiercinski, A. (1972). "Inter-and Intrapopulational Racial Differentiation of Tlatilco, Cerro de Las Mesas, Teothuacan, Monte Alban and Yucatan Maya," XXXIX Congreso Intern. de Americanistas, Lima 1970, 1, 231–252.
  46. ^ Karl Taube, for one, says "There simply is no material evidence of any Pre-Hispanic contact between the Old World and Mesoamerica before the arrival of the Spanish in the sixteenth century.", p. 17.
    • Davis, N. Voyagers to the New World, University of New Mexico Press, 1979 ISBN 0-8263-0880-5
    • Williams, S. Fantastic Archaeology, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991 ISBN 0-8122-1312-2
    • Feder, K.L. Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries. Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology 3rd ed., Trade Mayfield ISBN 0-7674-0459-9
  47. ^ Mexico South, Covarrubias, 1946
  48. ^ Ortiz de Montellano, et al. 1997, p. 217
  49. ^ Haslip-Viera, Gabriel: Bernard Ortiz de Montellano; Warren Barbour Source "Robbing Native American Cultures: Van Sertima's Afrocentricity and the Olmecs," Current Anthropology, 38 (3), (Tun., 1997), pp. 419–441
  50. ^ Diehl, Richard A. (2004). The Olmecs: America's First Civilization. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 112. ISBN 0-500-28503-9.
  51. ^ Milliken, William M. "Pre-Columbian Jade and Hard Stone." The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art 36, no. 4 (April 1949): 53–55. Accessed 17 March 2018.
  52. ^ "University of East Anglia collections"[dead link], Artworld
  53. ^ a b c d The British Museum. "Olmec Stone Mask." Smarthistory.com.
  54. ^ See Pool, pp. 179–242; Diehl, pp. 126–151.
  55. ^ Stefan Lovgren, National Geographic News, 26 January 2007
  56. ^ For example, Diehl, p. 170 or Pool, p. 54.
  57. ^ Flannery et al. (2005) hint that Olmec iconography was first developed in the Tlatilco culture.
  58. ^ See for example Reilly; Stevens (2007); Rose (2007). For a full discussion, see Olmec influences on Mesoamerican cultures.
  59. ^ See Carlson for details of the compass.
  60. ^ Covarrubias, p. 27.
  61. ^ Taube (2004), p. 122.
  62. ^ As one example, see Joyce et al., "Olmec Bloodletting: An Iconographic Study".
  63. ^ See Taube (2004), p. 122.
  64. ^ Pool, p. 139.
  65. ^ Ortiz et al., p. 249.
  66. ^ Pool, p. 116. Joralemon (1996), p. 218.
  67. ^ See Pohl et al. (2002).
  68. ^ "Writing May Be Oldest in Western Hemisphere". The New York Times. 15 September 2006. Retrieved 30 March 2008. A stone slab bearing 3,000-year-old writing previously unknown to scholars has been found in the Mexican state of Veracruz, and archaeologists say it is an example of the oldest script ever discovered in the Americas.
  69. ^ "'Oldest' New World writing found". BBC. 14 September 2006. Retrieved 30 March 2008. Ancient civilisations in Mexico developed a writing system as early as 900 BC, new evidence suggests.
  70. ^ "Oldest Writing in the New World". Science. Retrieved 30 March 2008. A block with a hitherto unknown system of writing has been found in the Olmec heartland of Veracruz, Mexico. Stylistic and other dating of the block places it in the early first millennium before the common era, the oldest writing in the New World, with features that firmly assign this pivotal development to the Olmec civilization of Mesoamerica.
  71. ^ Pohl et al. (2002).
  72. ^ Skidmore. These prominent proponents include Michael D. Coe, Richard Diehl, Karl Taube, and Stephen D. Houston.
  73. ^ Bruhns, et al.
  74. ^ Diehl, p. 184.
  75. ^ "Mesoamerican Long Count calendar & invention of the zero concept" section cited to Diehl, p. 186.
  76. ^ Haughton, p. 153. The earliest recovered Long Count dated is from Monument 1 in the Maya site El Baúl, Guatemala, bearing a date of 37 BCE.
  77. ^ Miller and Taube (1993) p. 42. Pool, p. 295.
  78. ^ Ortiz C.
  79. ^ See Filloy Nadal, p. 27, who says "If they [the balls] were used in the ballgame, we would be looking at the earliest evidence of this practice".
  80. ^ Coe (1968) p. 121.
  81. ^ Campbell & Kaufman (1976), pp. 80–89. For example, the words for "incense", "cacao", "corn", many names of various fruits, "nagual/shaman", "tobacco", "adobe", "ladder", "rubber", "corn granary", "squash/gourd", and "paper" in many Mesoamerican languages seem to have been borrowed from an ancient Mixe–Zoquean language.
  82. ^ Wichmann (1995).
  83. ^ a b Wichmann, Beliaev & Davletshin, (in press Sep 2008).
  84. ^ See Pool, p. 6, or Diehl, p. 85.
  85. ^ Diehl, p. 106. See also J. E. Clark, p. 343, who says "much of the art of La Venta appears to have been dedicated to rulers who dressed as gods, or to the gods themselves".
  86. ^ Diehl, p. 106.
  87. ^ Diehl, pp. 103–104.
  88. ^ See, for example, Cyphers (1996), p. 156.
  89. ^ See Santley, et al., p.4, for a discussion of Mesoamerican centralization and decentralization. See Cyphers (1999) for a discussion of the meaning of monument placement.
  90. ^ See Cyphers (1999) for a more detailed discussion.
  91. ^ Serra Puche et al., p. 36, who argue that "While Olmec art sometimes represents leaders, priests, and possibly soldiers, it is difficult to imagine that such institutions as the army, priest caste, or administrative-political groups were already fully developed by Olmec times." They go on to downplay the possibility of a strong central government.
  92. ^ Pool, p. 20.
  93. ^ Pool, p. 164.
  94. ^ Pool, p. 175.
  95. ^ Hirth, Kenneth; Cyphers, Ann; Cobean, Robert; De León, Jason; Glascock, Michael D. (2013). "Early Olmec obsidian trade and economic organization at San Lorenzo". Journal of Archaeological Science. 40 (6): 2784–2798. Bibcode:2013JArSc..40.2784H. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2013.01.033.
  96. ^ . Brigham Young University. Archived from the original on 13 August 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  97. ^ Except where otherwise (foot)noted, this Village life and diet section is referenced to Diehl (2004), Davies, and Pope et al.
  98. ^ Pohl.
  99. ^ VanDerwarker, p. 195, and Lawler, Archaeology (2007), p. 23, quoting VanDerwarker.
  100. ^ VanDerwarker, pp. 141–144.
  101. ^ Davies, p. 39.
  102. ^ Benson (1996) p. 263.
  103. ^ See translated excerpt from Melgar y Serrano's original 1869 report, reprinted in Adams (1991), p. 56. See also Pool (2007), pp. 1, 35 and Stirling (1968), p. 8.
  104. ^ Quoted in Coe (1968), p. 40.
  105. ^ Coe (1968), pp. 42–50.
  106. ^ "Esta gran cultura, que encontramos en niveles antiguos, es sin duda madre de otras culturas, como la maya, la teotihuacana, la zapoteca, la de El Tajín, y otras" ("This great culture, which we encounter in ancient levels, is without a doubt mother of other cultures, like the Maya, the Teotihuacana, the Zapotec, that of El Tajin, and others".) Caso (1942), p. 46.
  107. ^ Coe (1968), p. 50.
  108. ^ Genetic Affiliation of Pre-Hispanic and Contemporary Mayas Through Maternal Linage (Ochoa-Lugo 2016) [1]
  109. ^ Villamar Becerril Enrique, “Estudios de ADN y el origen de los olmecas”, Arqueología Mexicana, núm. 150, pp. 40-41.(2019)[2] 27 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  110. ^ See Grove (1976) or Ortiz de Montellano (1997).

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  • Taube, Karl (2004). (PDF). Pre-Columbian Art at Dumbarton Oaks, No. 2. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection; Trustees of Harvard University. ISBN 0-88402-275-7. OCLC 56096117. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 January 2012.
  • VanDerwarker, Amber (2006) Farming, Hunting, and Fishing in the Olmec World, University of Texas Press, ISBN 0-292-70980-3.
  • von Nagy, Christopher (1997). "The Geoarchaeology of Settlement in the Grijalva Delta". In Barbara L. Stark; Philip J. Arnold III (eds.). Olmec to Aztec: Settlement Patterns in the Ancient Gulf Lowlands. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. pp. 253–277. ISBN 0-8165-1689-8. OCLC 36364149.
  • Wichmann, Søren (1995). The Relationship Among the Mixe–Zoquean Languages of Mexico. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. ISBN 0-87480-487-6.
  • Wichmann, Søren; Dmitri Beliaev; Albert Davletshin (September 2008). (PDF). Proceedings of the Mesa Redonda Olmeca: Balance y Perspectivas, Museo Nacional de Antropología, México City, March 10–12, 2005. (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2008. Retrieved 18 September 2008.
  • Wilford, John Noble (15 March 2005). "Mother Culture, or Only a Sister?". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 September 2008.
  • Williams, Howel; Robert F. Heizer (September 1965). "Sources of Rocks Used in Olmec Monuments" (PDF online facsimile). Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility. Berkeley: University of California Department of Anthropology. 1 (Sources of Stones Used in Prehistoric Mesoamerican Sites): 1–44. ISSN 0068-5933. OCLC 1087514.

External links edit

  • Drawings and photographs of the 17 colossal heads
  • . Scientific American; Ma. del Carmen Rodríguez Martínez, Ponciano Ortíz Ceballos, Michael D. Coe, Richard A. Diehl, Stephen D. Houston, Karl A. Taube, Alfredo Delgado Calderón, Oldest Writing in the New World, Science, Vol 313, 15 September 2006, pp. 1610–1614.
  • BBC audio file. Discussion of Olmec culture (15 mins) A History of the World in 100 Objects

olmecs, were, earliest, known, major, mesoamerican, civilization, following, progressive, development, soconusco, they, occupied, tropical, lowlands, modern, mexican, states, veracruz, tabasco, been, speculated, that, derived, part, from, neighboring, mokaya, . The Olmecs ˈ ɒ l m ɛ k s ˈ oʊ l were the earliest known major Mesoamerican civilization Following a progressive development in Soconusco they occupied the tropical lowlands of the modern day Mexican states of Veracruz and Tabasco It has been speculated that the Olmecs derived in part from the neighboring Mokaya or Mixe Zoque cultures OlmecsThe Olmec heartland where the Olmec reigned from 1400 to 400 BCEGeographical rangeVeracruz MexicoPeriodPreclassic EraDatesc 1600 400 BCEType siteSan Lorenzo TenochtitlanMajor sitesLa Venta Tres Zapotes Laguna de los CerrosPreceded byArchaic MesoamericaFollowed byEpi OlmecsOlmec artworksOlmec Head No 3 from San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan 1200 900 BCE basalt height 1 8 m length 1 28 m width 0 83 m Xalapa Museum of Anthropology Xalapa Mexico El Senor de las Limas 1000 600 BCE greenstone height 55 cm Xalapa Museum of AnthropologyThe Wrestler 1200 400 BCE basalt height 66 cm from the Arroyo Sonso area Veracruz Mexico Museo Nacional de Antropologia Olmec artists are known for both monumental and miniature portrayals of what are assumed to be persons of authority from six ton heads sculptures to figurines The Olmecs flourished during Mesoamerica s formative period dating roughly from as early as 1500 BCE to about 400 BCE Pre Olmec cultures had flourished since about 2500 BCE but by 1600 1500 BCE early Olmec culture had emerged centered on the San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan site near the coast in southeast Veracruz 1 They were the first Mesoamerican civilization and laid many of the foundations for the civilizations that followed 2 Among other firsts the Olmec appeared to practice ritual bloodletting and played the Mesoamerican ballgame hallmarks of nearly all subsequent Mesoamerican societies The aspect of the Olmecs most familiar now is their artwork particularly the aptly named colossal heads 3 The Olmec civilization was first defined through artifacts which collectors purchased on the pre Columbian art market in the late 19th and early 20th centuries Olmec artworks are considered among ancient America s most striking 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Overview 2 1 Origins 2 2 La Venta 2 3 Decline 3 Artifacts 3 1 Colossal heads 3 2 Jade face masks 3 3 Kunz axes 4 Beyond the heartland 4 1 Central Mexico 4 2 Western Mexico 4 3 Southern Mexico and Guatemala 4 4 Nature of interaction 5 Notable innovations 5 1 Bloodletting and sacrifice speculation 5 2 Writing 5 3 Mesoamerican Long Count calendar and invention of the zero concept 5 4 Mesoamerican ballgame 6 Ethnicity and language 7 Religion and mythology 8 Social and political organization 9 Trade 10 Village life and diet 11 History of archaeological research 12 DNA 13 Alternative origin speculations 14 Gallery 15 See also 16 Footnotes 17 References 18 External linksEtymology editThe name Olmec means rubber people in Nahuatl the language of the Nahuas and was the Aztec Empire term for the people who lived in the Gulf Lowlands in the 15th and 16th centuries some 2000 years after the Olmec culture died out The term Rubber People refers to the ancient practice spanning from ancient Olmecs to Aztecs of extracting latex from Castilla elastica a rubber tree in the area The juice of a local vine Ipomoea alba was then mixed with this latex to create rubber as early as 1600 BCE 5 The Nahuatl word for the Olmecs was Ōlmecatl oːlˈmeːkat ɬ singular or Ōlmecah oːlˈmeːkaʔ plural This word is composed of the two words ōlli ˈoːlːi meaning natural rubber and mecatl ˈmeːkat ɬ meaning people 6 7 Early modern explorers and archaeologists however mistakenly applied the name Olmec to the rediscovered ruins and artifacts in the heartland decades before it was understood that these were not created by the people the Aztecs knew as the Olmec but rather a culture that was 2000 years older Despite the mistaken identity the name has stuck 8 It is not known what name the ancient Olmec used for themselves some later Mesoamerican accounts seem to refer to the ancient Olmec as Tamoanchan 9 A contemporary term sometimes used for the Olmec culture is tenocelome meaning mouth of the jaguar 10 Overview editThe Olmec heartland is the area in the Gulf lowlands where it expanded after early development in Soconusco Veracruz This area is characterized by swampy lowlands punctuated by low hills ridges and volcanoes The Sierra de los Tuxtlas rises sharply in the north along the Gulf of Mexico s Bay of Campeche Here the Olmec constructed permanent city temple complexes at San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan La Venta Tres Zapotes and Laguna de los Cerros In this region the first Mesoamerican civilization emerged and reigned from c 1400 400 BCE 11 Origins edit Main article San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan The beginnings of Olmec civilization have traditionally been placed between 1400 BCE and 1200 BCE Past finds of Olmec remains ritually deposited at the shrine El Manati near the triple archaeological sites known collectively as San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan moved this back to at least 1600 1500 BCE 12 It seems that the Olmec had their roots in early farming cultures of Tabasco which began between 5100 BCE and 4600 BCE These shared the same basic food crops and technologies of the later Olmec civilization 13 What is today called Olmec first appeared fully within San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan where distinctive Olmec features occurred around 1400 BCE The rise of civilization was assisted by the local ecology of well watered alluvial soil as well as by the transportation network provided by the Coatzacoalcos river basin This environment may be compared to that of other ancient centers of civilization the Nile Indus and Yellow River valleys and Mesopotamia This highly productive environment encouraged a densely concentrated population which in turn triggered the rise of an elite class 14 The elite class created the demand for the production of the symbolic and sophisticated luxury artifacts that define Olmec culture 15 Many of these luxury artifacts were made from materials such as jade obsidian and magnetite which came from distant locations and suggest that early Olmec elites had access to an extensive trading network in Mesoamerica The source of the most valued jade was the Motagua River valley in eastern Guatemala 16 and Olmec obsidian has been traced to sources in the Guatemala highlands such as El Chayal and San Martin Jilotepeque or in Puebla 17 distances ranging from 200 to 400 km 120 250 miles away respectively 18 The state of Guerrero and in particular its early Mezcala culture seem to have played an important role in the early history of Olmec culture Olmec style artifacts tend to appear earlier in some parts of Guerrero than in the Veracruz Tabasco area In particular the relevant objects from the Amuco Abelino site in Guerrero reveal dates as early as 1530 BCE 19 The city of Teopantecuanitlan in Guerrero is also relevant in this regard La Venta edit Main article La Venta nbsp Great pyramid in La Venta TabascoThe first Olmec center San Lorenzo was all but abandoned around 900 BCE at about the same time that La Venta rose to prominence 20 A wholesale destruction of many San Lorenzo monuments also occurred c 950s BCE which may indicate an internal uprising or less likely an invasion 21 The latest thinking however is that environmental changes may have been responsible for this shift in Olmec centers with certain important rivers changing course 22 In any case following the decline of San Lorenzo La Venta became the most prominent Olmec center lasting from 900 BCE until its abandonment around 400 BCE 23 La Venta sustained the Olmec cultural traditions with spectacular displays of power and wealth The Great Pyramid was the largest Mesoamerican structure of its time Even today after 2500 years of erosion it rises 34 m 112 ft above the naturally flat landscape 24 Buried deep within La Venta lay opulent labor intensive offerings 1000 tons of smooth serpentine blocks large mosaic pavements and at least 48 separate votive offerings of polished jade celts pottery figurines and hematite mirrors 25 Decline edit Scholars have yet to determine the cause of the eventual extinction of the Olmec culture Between 400 and 350 BCE the population in the eastern half of the Olmec heartland dropped precipitously and the area was sparsely inhabited until the 19th century 26 According to archaeologists this depopulation was probably the result of very serious environmental changes that rendered the region unsuited for large groups of farmers in particular changes to the riverine environment that the Olmec depended upon for agriculture hunting and gathering and transportation These changes may have been triggered by tectonic upheavals or subsidence or the siltation of rivers due to agricultural practices 27 One theory for the considerable population drop during the Terminal Formative period is suggested by Santley and colleagues Santley et al 1997 who propose the relocation of settlements due to volcanism instead of extinction Volcanic eruptions during the Early Late and Terminal Formative periods would have blanketed the lands and forced the Olmec to move their settlements 28 Whatever the cause within a few hundred years of the abandonment of the last Olmec cities successor cultures became firmly established The Tres Zapotes site on the western edge of the Olmec heartland continued to be occupied well past 400 BCE but without the hallmarks of the Olmec culture This post Olmec culture often labeled the Epi Olmec has features similar to those found at Izapa some 550 kilometres 340 mi to the southeast 29 Artifacts edit nbsp Seated figurine 12th 9th century BC painted ceramic height 34 cm width 31 8 cm depth 14 6 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City nbsp Bird shaped vessel 12th 9th century BC ceramic with red ochre height 16 5 cm Metropolitan Museum of ArtThe Olmec culture was first defined as an art style and this continues to be the hallmark of the culture 30 Wrought in a large number of media jade clay basalt and greenstone among others much Olmec art such as The Wrestler is naturalistic Other art expresses fantastic anthropomorphic creatures often highly stylized using an iconography reflective of a religious meaning 31 Common motifs include downturned mouths and a cleft head both of which are seen in representations of werejaguars 30 In addition to making human and human like subjects Olmec artisans were adept at animal portrayals While Olmec figurines are found abundantly in sites throughout the Formative Period the stone monuments such as the colossal heads are the most recognizable feature of Olmec culture 32 These monuments can be divided into four classes 33 Colossal heads which can be up to 3 m 10 ft tall Rectangular altars more likely thrones 34 such as Altar 5 shown below Free standing in the round sculpture such as the twins from El Azuzul or San Martin Pajapan Monument 1 and Stele such as La Venta Monument 19 above The stelae form was generally introduced later than the colossal heads altars or free standing sculptures Over time the stele changed from simple representation of figures such as Monument 19 or La Venta Stela 1 toward representations of historical events particularly acts legitimizing rulers This trend would culminate in post Olmec monuments such as La Mojarra Stela 1 which combines images of rulers with script and calendar dates 35 Colossal heads edit Main article Olmec colossal heads The most recognized aspect of the Olmec civilization are the enormous helmeted heads 36 As no known pre Columbian text explains them these impressive monuments have been the subject of much speculation Once theorized to be ballplayers it is now generally accepted that these heads are portraits of rulers perhaps dressed as ballplayers 37 Infused with individuality no two heads are alike and the helmet like headdresses are adorned with distinctive elements suggesting personal or group symbols Some have also speculated that Mesoamerican people believed that the soul along with all of one s experiences and emotions was contained inside the head 38 39 Seventeen colossal heads have been unearthed to date 40 Site Count DesignationsSan Lorenzo 10 Colossal Heads 1 through 10La Venta 4 Monuments 1 through 4Tres Zapotes 2 Monuments A amp QRancho la Cobata 1 Monument 1 nbsp Tuxtla statuetteThe heads range in size from the Rancho La Cobata head at 3 4 m 11 ft high to the pair at Tres Zapotes at 1 47 m 4 ft 10 in Scholars calculate that the largest heads weigh between 25 and 55 tonnes 28 and 61 short tons 41 nbsp One of the mosaics from the La Venta Olmec site The heads were carved from single blocks or boulders of volcanic basalt found in the Sierra de los Tuxtlas The Tres Zapotes heads for example were sculpted from basalt found at the summit of Cerro el Vigia at the western end of the Tuxtlas The San Lorenzo and La Venta heads on the other hand were probably carved from the basalt of Cerro Cintepec on the southeastern side 42 perhaps at the nearby Llano del Jicaro workshop and dragged or floated to their final destination dozens of miles away 43 It has been estimated that moving a colossal head required the efforts of 1 500 people for three to four months 18 Some of the heads and many other monuments have been variously mutilated buried and disinterred reset in new locations and or reburied Some monuments and at least two heads were recycled or recarved but it is not known whether this was simply due to the scarcity of stone or whether these actions had ritual or other connotations Scholars believe that some mutilation had significance beyond mere destruction but some scholars still do not rule out internal conflicts or less likely invasion as a factor 44 The flat faced thick lipped heads have caused some debate due to their resemblance to some African facial characteristics Based on this comparison some writers have said that the Olmecs were Africans who had emigrated to the New World 45 But the vast majority of archaeologists and other Mesoamerican scholars reject claims of pre Columbian contacts with Africa 46 Explanations for the facial features of the colossal heads include the possibility that the heads were carved in this manner due to the shallow space allowed on the basalt boulders Others note that in addition to the broad noses and thick lips the eyes of the heads often show the epicanthic fold and that all these characteristics can still be found in modern Mesoamerican Indians For instance in the 1940s the artist art historian Miguel Covarrubias published a series of photos of Olmec artworks and of the faces of modern Mexican Indians with very similar facial characteristics 47 The African origin hypothesis assumes that Olmec carving was intended to be a representation of the inhabitants an assumption that is hard to justify given the full corpus of representation in Olmec carving 48 Ivan Van Sertima claimed that the seven braids on the Tres Zapotes head was an Ethiopian hair style but he offered no evidence it was a contemporary style The Egyptologist Frank J Yurco has said that the Olmec braids do not resemble contemporary Egyptian or Nubian braids 49 Richard Diehl wrote There can be no doubt that the heads depict the American Indian physical type still seen on the streets of Soteapan Acayucan and other towns in the region 50 Jade face masks edit Another type of artifact is much smaller hardstone carvings in jade of a face in a mask form Jade is a particularly precious material and it was used as a mark of rank by the ruling classes 51 By 1500 BCE early Olmec sculptors mastered the human form 38 This can be determined by wooden Olmec sculptures discovered in the swampy bogs of El Manati 38 Before radiocarbon dating could tell the exact age of Olmec pieces archaeologists and art historians noticed the unique Olmec style in a variety of artifacts 38 Curators and scholars refer to Olmec style face masks but to date no example has been recovered in an archaeologically controlled Olmec context They have been recovered from sites of other cultures including one deliberately deposited in the ceremonial altepetl precinct of Tenochtitlan in what is now Mexico City The mask would presumably have been about 2000 years old when the Aztecs buried it suggesting such masks were valued and collected as were Roman antiquities in Europe 52 The Olmec style refers to the combination of deep set eyes nostrils and strong slightly asymmetrical mouth 38 The Olmec style also very distinctly combines facial features of both humans and jaguars 53 Olmec arts are strongly tied to the Olmec religion which prominently featured jaguars 53 The Olmec people believed that in the distant past a race of werejaguars was made between the union of a jaguar and a woman 53 One werejaguar quality that can be found is the sharp cleft in the forehead of many supernatural beings in Olmec art This sharp cleft is associated with the natural indented head of jaguars 53 nbsp Ornamental mask 10th century BCE serpentine height 9 2 cm width 7 9 cm depth 3 2 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City nbsp Mask 10th 6th century BCE jadeite height 17 1 cm width 16 5 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Mask c 900 500 BCE jadeite Dallas Museum of Art Dallas Texas US nbsp Mask with cinnabar tattoos c 900 300 BCE jadeite with cinnabar Minneapolis Institute of Art Minneapolis US Kunz axes edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Kunz axes also known as votive axes are figures that represent werejaguars and were apparently used for rituals In most cases the head is half the total volume of the figure All Kunz axes have flat noses and an open mouth The name Kunz comes from George Frederick Kunz an American mineralogist who described a figure in 1890 nbsp 1200 400 BCE polished green quartz aventurine height 29 cm width 13 5 cm British Museum London nbsp 900 500 BCE stone Dallas Museum of Art Texas US nbsp 12th 3rd century BCE stone height 32 2 cm width 14 cm depth 11 5 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Ohio US nbsp 800 400 BCE serpentine cinnabar Dallas Museum of ArtBeyond the heartland editMain article Olmec influences on Mesoamerican cultures nbsp The major Formative Period Pre Classic Era sites in present day Mexico which show Olmec influences in the archaeological record Olmec style artifacts designs figurines monuments and iconography have been found in the archaeological records of sites hundreds of kilometres outside the Olmec heartland These sites include 54 Central Mexico edit Tlatilco and Tlapacoya major centers of the Tlatilco culture in the Valley of Mexico where artifacts include hollow baby face motif figurines and Olmec designs on ceramics Chalcatzingo in Valley of Morelos central Mexico which features Olmec style monumental art and rock art with Olmec style figures Also in 2007 archaeologists unearthed Zazacatla an Olmec influenced city in Morelos Located about 40 kilometres 25 mi south of Mexico City Zazacatla covered about 2 5 square kilometres 1 sq mi between 800 and 500 BCE 55 Western Mexico edit Teopantecuanitlan in Guerrero which features Olmec style monumental art as well as city plans with distinctive Olmec features Also the Juxtlahuaca and Oxtotitlan cave paintings feature Olmec designs and motifs 56 Southern Mexico and Guatemala edit Olmec influence is also seen at several sites in the Southern Maya area In Guatemala sites showing probable Olmec influence include San Bartolo Takalik Abaj and La Democracia Nature of interaction edit Many theories have been advanced to account for the occurrence of Olmec influence far outside the heartland including long range trade by Olmec merchants Olmec colonization of other regions Olmec artisans travelling to other cities conscious imitation of Olmec artistic styles by developing towns some even suggest the prospect of Olmec military domination or that the Olmec iconography was actually developed outside the heartland 57 The generally accepted but by no means unanimous interpretation is that the Olmec style artifacts in all sizes became associated with elite status and were adopted by non Olmec Formative Period chieftains in an effort to bolster their status 58 Notable innovations editIn addition to their influence with contemporaneous Mesoamerican cultures as the first civilization in Mesoamerica the Olmecs are credited or speculatively credited with many firsts including the bloodletting and perhaps human sacrifice writing and epigraphy and the invention of popcorn zero and the Mesoamerican calendar and the Mesoamerican ballgame as well as perhaps the compass 59 Some researchers including artist and art historian Miguel Covarrubias even postulate that the Olmecs formulated the forerunners of many of the later Mesoamerican deities 60 Bloodletting and sacrifice speculation edit nbsp Altar 5 from La Venta The inert were jaguar baby held by the central figure is seen by some as an indication of child sacrifice In contrast its sides show bas reliefs of humans holding quite lively were jaguar babies Although the archaeological record does not include explicit representation of Olmec bloodletting 61 researchers have found other evidence that the Olmec ritually practiced it For example numerous natural and ceramic stingray spikes and maguey thorns have been found at Olmec sites 62 and certain artifacts have been identified as bloodletters 63 The argument that the Olmec instituted human sacrifice is significantly more speculative No Olmec or Olmec influenced sacrificial artifacts have yet been discovered no Olmec or Olmec influenced artwork unambiguously shows sacrificial victims as do the danzante figures of Monte Alban or scenes of human sacrifice such as can be seen in the famous ballcourt mural from El Tajin 64 At El Manati disarticulated skulls and femurs as well as the complete skeletons of newborns or fetuses have been discovered amidst the other offerings leading to speculation concerning infant sacrifice Scholars have not determined how the infants met their deaths 65 Some authors have associated infant sacrifice with Olmec ritual art showing limp werejaguar babies most famously in La Venta s Altar 5 on the right or Las Limas figure 66 Any definitive answer requires further findings Writing edit See also Cascajal Block The Olmec may have been the first civilization in the Western Hemisphere to develop a writing system Symbols found in 2002 and 2006 date from 650 BCE 67 and 900 BCE 68 respectively preceding the oldest Zapotec writing found so far which dates from about 500 BCE 69 70 The 2002 find at the San Andres site shows a bird speech scrolls and glyphs that are similar to the later Maya script 71 Known as the Cascajal Block and dated between 1100 BCE and 900 BCE the 2006 find from a site near San Lorenzo shows a set of 62 symbols 28 of which are unique carved on a serpentine block A large number of prominent archaeologists have hailed this find as the earliest pre Columbian writing 72 Others are skeptical because of the stone s singularity the fact that it had been removed from any archaeological context and because it bears no apparent resemblance to any other Mesoamerican writing system 73 There are also well documented later hieroglyphs known as the Isthmian script and while there are some who believe that the Isthmian may represent a transitional script between an earlier Olmec writing system and the Maya script the matter remains unsettled Mesoamerican Long Count calendar and invention of the zero concept edit See also History of zero nbsp The back of Stela C from Tres ZapotesThis is the second oldest Long Count date yet discovered The numerals 7 16 6 16 18 translate to 3 September 32 BCE Julian The glyphs surrounding the date are one of the few surviving examples of Epi Olmec script 74 The Long Count calendar used by many subsequent Mesoamerican civilizations as well as the concept of zero may have been devised by the Olmecs Because the six artifacts with the earliest Long Count calendar dates were all discovered outside the immediate Maya homeland it is likely that this calendar predated the Maya and was possibly the invention of the Olmecs Indeed three of these six artifacts were found within the Olmec heartland But an argument against an Olmec origin is the fact that the Olmec civilization had ended by the 4th century BCE several centuries before the earliest known Long Count date artifact 75 The Long Count calendar required the use of zero as a place holder within its vigesimal base 20 positional numeral system A shell glyph nbsp was used as a zero symbol for these Long Count dates the second oldest of which on Stela C at Tres Zapotes has a date of 32 BCE This is one of the earliest uses of the zero concept in history 76 Mesoamerican ballgame edit The Olmec are strong candidates for originating the Mesoamerican ballgame so prevalent among later cultures of the region and used for recreational and religious purposes 77 A dozen rubber balls dating to 1600 BCE or earlier have been found in El Manati a bog 10 km 6 mi east of San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan 78 These balls predate the earliest ballcourt yet discovered at Paso de la Amada c 1400 BCE although there is no certainty that they were used in the ballgame 79 Ethnicity and language edit nbsp Olmec tomb at La Venta Park Villahermosa Tabasco While the actual ethno linguistic affiliation of the Olmec remains unknown various hypotheses have been put forward For example in 1968 Michael D Coe speculated that the Olmec were Maya predecessors 80 In 1976 linguists Lyle Campbell and Terrence Kaufman published a paper in which they argued a core number of loanwords had apparently spread from a Mixe Zoquean language into many other Mesoamerican languages 81 Campbell and Kaufman proposed that the presence of these core loanwords indicated that the Olmec generally regarded as the first highly civilized Mesoamerican society spoke a language ancestral to Mixe Zoquean The spread of this vocabulary particular to their culture accompanied the diffusion of other Olmec cultural and artistic traits that appears in the archaeological record of other Mesoamerican societies Mixe Zoque specialist Soren Wichmann first critiqued this theory on the basis that most of the Mixe Zoquean loans seemed to originate only from the Zoquean branch of the family This implied the loanword transmission occurred in the period after the two branches of the language family split placing the time of the borrowings outside of the Olmec period 82 However new evidence has pushed back the proposed date for the split of Mixean and Zoquean languages to a period within the Olmec era 83 Based on this dating the architectural and archaeological patterns and the particulars of the vocabulary loaned to other Mesoamerican languages from Mixe Zoquean Wichmann now suggests that the Olmecs of San Lorenzo spoke proto Mixe and the Olmecs of La Venta spoke proto Zoque 83 At least the fact that the Mixe Zoquean languages are still spoken in an area corresponding roughly to the Olmec heartland and are historically known to have been spoken there leads most scholars to assume that the Olmec spoke one or more Mixe Zoquean languages 84 Religion and mythology editMain article Olmec religion nbsp Olmec Chief or King Relief from La Venta Archaeological Site in Tabasco Olmec religious activities were performed by a combination of rulers full time priests and shamans The rulers seem to have been the most important religious figures with their links to the Olmec deities or supernaturals providing legitimacy for their rule 85 There is also considerable evidence for shamans in the Olmec archaeological record particularly in the so called transformation figures 86 As Olmec mythology has left no documents comparable to the Popol Vuh from Maya mythology any exposition of Olmec mythology must be based on interpretations of surviving monumental and portable art such as the Senor de Las Limas statue at the Xalapa Museum and comparisons with other Mesoamerican mythologies Olmec art shows that such deities as Feathered Serpent and a rain supernatural were already in the Mesoamerican pantheon in Olmec times 87 Social and political organization editLittle is directly known about the societal or political structure of Olmec society Although it is assumed by most researchers that the colossal heads and several other sculptures represent rulers nothing has been found like the Maya stelae which name specific rulers and provide the dates of their rule 88 Instead archaeologists relied on the data that they had such as large and small scale site surveys These provided evidence of considerable centralization within the Olmec region first at San Lorenzo and then at La Venta no other Olmec sites come close to these in terms of area or in the quantity and quality of architecture and sculpture 89 This evidence of geographic and demographic centralization leads archaeologists to propose that Olmec society itself was hierarchical concentrated first at San Lorenzo and then at La Venta with an elite that was able to use their control over materials such as water and monumental stone to exert command and legitimize their regime 90 Nonetheless Olmec society is thought to lack many of the institutions of later civilizations such as a standing army or priestly caste 91 And there is no evidence that San Lorenzo or La Venta controlled even during their heyday all of the Olmec heartland 92 There is some doubt for example that La Venta controlled even Arroyo Sonso only some 35 km 22 mi away 93 Studies of the Sierra de los Tuxtlas settlements some 60 km 35 mi away indicate that this area was composed of more or less egalitarian communities outside the control of lowland centers 94 Trade editThe wide diffusion of Olmec artifacts and Olmecoid iconography throughout much of Mesoamerica indicates the existence of extensive long distance trade networks Exotic prestigious and high value materials such as greenstone and marine shell were moved in significant quantities across large distances Some of the reasons for trade revolve around the lack of obsidian in the heartland The Olmec used obsidian in many tools because worked edges were very sharp and durable Most of the obsidian found has been traced back to Guatemala showing the extensive trade 95 While the Olmec were not the first in Mesoamerica to organize long distance exchanges of goods the Olmec period saw a significant expansion in interregional trade routes more variety in material goods exchanged and a greater diversity in the sources from which the base materials were obtained Village life and diet editDespite their size and deliberate urban design which was copied by other centers 96 San Lorenzo and La Venta were largely ceremonial centers and the majority of the Olmec lived in villages similar to present day villages and hamlets in Tabasco and Veracruz 97 These villages were located on higher ground and consisted of several scattered houses A modest temple may have been associated with the larger villages The individual dwellings would consist of a house an associated lean to and one or more storage pits similar in function to a root cellar A nearby garden was used for medicinal and cooking herbs and for smaller crops such as the domesticated sunflower Fruit trees such as avocado or cacao were probably available nearby Although the river banks were used to plant crops between flooding periods the Olmecs probably also practiced slash and burn agriculture to clear the forests and shrubs and to provide new fields once the old fields were exhausted 98 Fields were located outside the village and were used for maize beans squash cassava and sweet potato Based on archaeological studies of two villages in the Tuxtlas Mountains it is known that maize cultivation became increasingly important to the Olmec over time although the diet remained fairly diverse 99 The fruits and vegetables were supplemented with fish turtle snake and mollusks from the nearby rivers and crabs and shellfish in the coastal areas Birds were available as food sources as were game including peccary opossum raccoon rabbit and in particular deer 100 Despite the wide range of hunting and fishing available midden surveys in San Lorenzo have found that the domesticated dog was the single most plentiful source of animal protein 101 History of archaeological research edit nbsp Kunz Axe 1000 400 BCE jadeite height 31 cm 123 16 in width 16 cm 65 16 in 11 cm 45 16 in American Museum of Natural History New York NY USA The jade Kunz Axe first described by George Kunz in 1890 Although shaped like an axe head with an edge along the bottom it is unlikely that this artifact was used except in ritual settings At a height of 28 cm 11 in it is one of the largest jade objects ever found in Mesoamerica 102 Olmec culture was unknown to historians until the mid 19th century In 1869 the Mexican antiquarian traveller Jose Melgar y Serrano published a description of the first Olmec monument to have been found in situ This monument the colossal head now labelled Tres Zapotes Monument A had been discovered in the late 1850s by a farm worker clearing forested land on a hacienda in Veracruz Hearing about the curious find while travelling through the region Melgar y Serrano first visited the site in 1862 to see for himself and complete the partially exposed sculpture s excavation His description of the object published several years later after further visits to the site represents the earliest documented report of an artifact of what is now known as the Olmec culture 103 In the latter half of the 19th century Olmec artifacts such as the Kunz Axe right came to light and were subsequently recognized as belonging to a unique artistic tradition Frans Blom and Oliver La Farge made the first detailed descriptions of La Venta and San Martin Pajapan Monument 1 during their 1925 expedition However at this time most archaeologists assumed the Olmec were contemporaneous with the Maya even Blom and La Farge were in their own words inclined to ascribe them to the Maya culture 104 Matthew Stirling of the Smithsonian Institution conducted the first detailed scientific excavations of Olmec sites in the 1930s and 1940s Stirling along with art historian Miguel Covarrubias became convinced that the Olmec predated most other known Mesoamerican civilizations 105 In counterpoint to Stirling Covarrubias and Alfonso Caso however Mayanists J Eric Thompson and Sylvanus Morley argued for Classic era dates for the Olmec artifacts The question of Olmec chronology came to a head at a 1942 Tuxtla Gutierrez conference where Alfonso Caso declared that the Olmecs were the mother culture cultura madre of Mesoamerica 106 Shortly after the conference radiocarbon dating proved the antiquity of the Olmec civilization although the mother culture question generated considerable debate even 60 years later 107 DNA editIn the investigations of the San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan Archaeological Project at the sites of San Lorenzo and Loma del Zapote several human burials from the Olmec period were found The bone consistency in two of them allowed the study of their mitochondrial DNA to be carried out successfully as part of an investigation that proposes the comparative analysis of the genetic information of the Olmecs with that obtained from subjects from other Mesoamerican societies under the advice of the specialists Dr Maria de Lourdes Munoz Moreno and Miguel Moreno Galeana both at CINVESTAV in Mexico This pioneering study of mitochondrial DNA in 2018 was carried out on two Olmec individuals one from San Lorenzo and the other from Loma del Zapote resulted in both cases in the unequivocal presence of the distinctive mutations of the haplogroup A maternal lineage They share the most abundant of the five mitochondrial haplogroups characteristic of the indigenous populations of the Americas A B C D and X 108 109 Alternative origin speculations editMain article Olmec alternative origin speculations Partly because the Olmecs developed the first Mesoamerican civilization and partly because little is known of them compared to for example the Maya or Aztec a number of Olmec alternative origin speculations have been put forth Although several of these speculations particularly the theory that the Olmecs were of African origin popularized by Ivan Van Sertima s book They Came Before Columbus have become well known within popular culture they are not considered credible by the vast majority of Mesoamerican researchers and scientists who discard them as pop culture pseudo science 110 As of 2018 mitochondrial DNA study carried out on Olmec remains one from San Lorenzo and the other from Loma del Zapote resulted in both cases in the unequivocal presence of the distinctive mutations of the A maternal lineage That is the origin of the Olmecs is not in Africa but in America since they share the most abundant of the five mitochondrial haplogroups characteristic of the indigenous populations of our continent A B C D and X 3 Archived 27 February 2021 at the Wayback MachineGallery edit nbsp La Venta stele 19 with an early depiction of a feathered serpent nbsp Olmec Head No 1 1200 900 BCE nbsp Kneeling human figure 1200 600 BCE nbsp The twins from El Azuzul 1200 900 BCE nbsp Carved travertine vessel with an incised pattern 12th 3rd century BCE nbsp Three celts Olmec ritual objects nbsp Olmec were jaguar nbsp Olmec style bottle reputedly from Las Bocas 1100 800 BCE nbsp Olmec jade mask nbsp Olmec style painting from the Juxtlahuaca cave nbsp An Olmec baby figurine nbsp Olmec style bas relief El Rey from ChalcatzingoSee also editEl Azuzul a small archaeological site in the Olmec heartland Cerro de las Mesas a post Olmec archaeological site List of megalithic sites List of Mesoamerican pyramidsFootnotes edit Diehl Richard A 2004 The Olmecs America s First Civilization London Thames and Hudson pp 9 25 ISBN 0 500 28503 9 See Pool 2007 p 2 Although there is wide agreement that the Olmec culture helped lay the foundations for the civilizations that followed there is disagreement over the extent of the Olmec contributions and even a proper definition of the Olmec culture See Olmec influences on Mesoamerican cultures for a deeper treatment of this question See as one example Diehl p 11 See Diehl p 108 for the ancient America superlatives The artist and archaeologist Miguel Covarrubias 1957 p 50 says that Olmec pieces are among the world s masterpieces Rubber Processing MIT Olmecas n d Think Quest Retrieved 20 September 2012 from link Archived 24 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Coe 1968 p 42 Diehl p 14 Coe 2002 refers to an old Nahuatl poem cited by Miguel Leon Portilla which itself refers to a land called Tamoanchan in a certain erawhich no one can reckonwhich no one can remember where there was a government for a long time Coe interprets Tamoanchan as a Mayan language word meaning Land of Rain or Mist p 61 The term tenocelome is used as early as 1967 by George Kubler in American Anthropologist v 69 p 404 Dates from Pool p 1 Diehl gives a slightly earlier date of 1500 BCE p 9 but the same end date Any dates for the start of the Olmec civilization or culture are problematic as its rise was a gradual process Most Olmec dates are based on radiocarbon dating see e g Diehl p 10 which is only accurate within a given range e g 90 years in the case of early El Manati layers and much is still to be learned concerning early Gulf lowland settlements Richard A Diehl 2004 The Olmecs America s First Civilization London Thames amp Hudson pp 25 27 Diehl 2004 pp 23 24 Beck Roger B Linda Black Larry S Krieger Phillip C Naylor Dahia Ibo Shabaka 1999 World History Patterns of Interaction Evanston IL McDougal Littell ISBN 0 395 87274 X Pool pp 26 27 provides a great overview of this theory and says The generation of food surpluses is necessary for the development of social and political hierarchies and there is no doubt that high agricultural productivity combined with the natural abundance of aquatic foods in the Gulf lowlands supported their growth Pool p 151 Diehl p 132 or Pool p 150 a b Pool p 103 Evans Susan Toby Webster David L 2000 Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 315 ISBN 978 1 136 80185 3 Diehl p 9 Coe 1967 p 72 Alternatively the mutilation of these monuments may be unrelated to the decline and abandonment of San Lorenzo Some researchers believe that the mutilation had ritualistic aspects particularly since most mutilated monuments were reburied in a row Pool p 135 Diehl pp 58 59 82 Diehl p 9 Pool gives dates 1000 BCE 400 BCE for La Venta Pool p 157 Pool p 161 162 Diehl p 82 Nagy p 270 however is more circumspect stating that in the Grijalva river delta on the eastern edge of the heartland the local population had significantly declined in apparent population density A low density Late Preclassic and Early Classic occupation may have existed however it remains invisible Quote and analysis from Diehl p 82 echoed in other works such as Pool Vanderwarker 2006 pp 50 51 Coe 2002 p 88 a b Coe 2002 p 62 Coe 2002 p 88 and others Pool p 105 Pool p 106 Diehl pp 109 115 Grove 1973 Pool pp 106 108 176 Diehl p 111 Pool p 118 Diehl p 112 Coe 2002 p 69 They wear headgear rather like American football helmets which probably served as protection in both war and in the ceremonial game played throughout Mesoamerica a b c d e Miller Mary Ellen The Art of Mesoamerica From Olmec to Aztec Thames amp Hudson 4th edition 20 October 2006 Grove p 55 Pool p 107 In particular Williams and Heizer p 29 calculated the weight of San Lorenzo Colossal Head 1 at 25 3 short tons or 23 tonnes See Scarre pp 271 274 for the 55 tonnes weight See Williams and Heizer for more detail Scarre Pool p 129 Diehl p 119 Wiercinski A 1972 Inter and Intrapopulational Racial Differentiation of Tlatilco Cerro de Las Mesas Teothuacan Monte Alban and Yucatan Maya XXXIX Congreso Intern de Americanistas Lima 1970 1 231 252 Karl Taube for one says There simply is no material evidence of any Pre Hispanic contact between the Old World and Mesoamerica before the arrival of the Spanish in the sixteenth century p 17 Davis N Voyagers to the New World University of New Mexico Press 1979 ISBN 0 8263 0880 5 Williams S Fantastic Archaeology University of Pennsylvania Press 1991 ISBN 0 8122 1312 2 Feder K L Frauds Myths and Mysteries Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology 3rd ed Trade Mayfield ISBN 0 7674 0459 9 Mexico South Covarrubias 1946 Ortiz de Montellano et al 1997 p 217 Haslip Viera Gabriel Bernard Ortiz de Montellano Warren Barbour Source Robbing Native American Cultures Van Sertima s Afrocentricity and the Olmecs Current Anthropology 38 3 Tun 1997 pp 419 441 Diehl Richard A 2004 The Olmecs America s First Civilization London Thames and Hudson p 112 ISBN 0 500 28503 9 Milliken William M Pre Columbian Jade and Hard Stone The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art 36 no 4 April 1949 53 55 Accessed 17 March 2018 University of East Anglia collections dead link Artworld a b c d The British Museum Olmec Stone Mask Smarthistory com See Pool pp 179 242 Diehl pp 126 151 Stefan Lovgren Ancient City Found in Mexico Shows Olmec Influence National Geographic News 26 January 2007 For example Diehl p 170 or Pool p 54 Flannery et al 2005 hint that Olmec iconography was first developed in the Tlatilco culture See for example Reilly Stevens 2007 Rose 2007 For a full discussion see Olmec influences on Mesoamerican cultures See Carlson for details of the compass Covarrubias p 27 Taube 2004 p 122 As one example see Joyce et al Olmec Bloodletting An Iconographic Study See Taube 2004 p 122 Pool p 139 Ortiz et al p 249 Pool p 116 Joralemon 1996 p 218 See Pohl et al 2002 Writing May Be Oldest in Western Hemisphere The New York Times 15 September 2006 Retrieved 30 March 2008 A stone slab bearing 3 000 year old writing previously unknown to scholars has been found in the Mexican state of Veracruz and archaeologists say it is an example of the oldest script ever discovered in the Americas Oldest New World writing found BBC 14 September 2006 Retrieved 30 March 2008 Ancient civilisations in Mexico developed a writing system as early as 900 BC new evidence suggests Oldest Writing in the New World Science Retrieved 30 March 2008 A block with a hitherto unknown system of writing has been found in the Olmec heartland of Veracruz Mexico Stylistic and other dating of the block places it in the early first millennium before the common era the oldest writing in the New World with features that firmly assign this pivotal development to the Olmec civilization of Mesoamerica Pohl et al 2002 Skidmore These prominent proponents include Michael D Coe Richard Diehl Karl Taube and Stephen D Houston Bruhns et al Diehl p 184 Mesoamerican Long Count calendar amp invention of the zero concept section cited to Diehl p 186 Haughton p 153 The earliest recovered Long Count dated is from Monument 1 in the Maya site El Baul Guatemala bearing a date of 37 BCE Miller and Taube 1993 p 42 Pool p 295 Ortiz C See Filloy Nadal p 27 who says If they the balls were used in the ballgame we would be looking at the earliest evidence of this practice Coe 1968 p 121 Campbell amp Kaufman 1976 pp 80 89 For example the words for incense cacao corn many names of various fruits nagual shaman tobacco adobe ladder rubber corn granary squash gourd and paper in many Mesoamerican languages seem to have been borrowed from an ancient Mixe Zoquean language Wichmann 1995 a b Wichmann Beliaev amp Davletshin in press Sep 2008 See Pool p 6 or Diehl p 85 Diehl p 106 See also J E Clark p 343 who says much of the art of La Venta appears to have been dedicated to rulers who dressed as gods or to the gods themselves Diehl p 106 Diehl pp 103 104 See for example Cyphers 1996 p 156 See Santley et al p 4 for a discussion of Mesoamerican centralization and decentralization See Cyphers 1999 for a discussion of the meaning of monument placement See Cyphers 1999 for a more detailed discussion Serra Puche et al p 36 who argue that While Olmec art sometimes represents leaders priests and possibly soldiers it is difficult to imagine that such institutions as the army priest caste or administrative political groups were already fully developed by Olmec times They go on to downplay the possibility of a strong central government Pool p 20 Pool p 164 Pool p 175 Hirth Kenneth Cyphers Ann Cobean Robert De Leon Jason Glascock Michael D 2013 Early Olmec obsidian trade and economic organization at San Lorenzo Journal of Archaeological Science 40 6 2784 2798 Bibcode 2013JArSc 40 2784H doi 10 1016 j jas 2013 01 033 Chiapa de Corzo Archaeological Project Brigham Young University Archived from the original on 13 August 2011 Retrieved 18 March 2012 Except where otherwise foot noted this Village life and diet section is referenced to Diehl 2004 Davies and Pope et al Pohl VanDerwarker p 195 and Lawler Archaeology 2007 p 23 quoting VanDerwarker VanDerwarker pp 141 144 Davies p 39 Benson 1996 p 263 See translated excerpt from Melgar y Serrano s original 1869 report reprinted in Adams 1991 p 56 See also Pool 2007 pp 1 35 and Stirling 1968 p 8 Quoted in Coe 1968 p 40 Coe 1968 pp 42 50 Esta gran cultura que encontramos en niveles antiguos es sin duda madre de otras culturas como la maya la teotihuacana la zapoteca la de El Tajin y otras This great culture which we encounter in ancient levels is without a doubt mother of other cultures like the Maya the Teotihuacana the Zapotec that of El Tajin and others Caso 1942 p 46 Coe 1968 p 50 Genetic Affiliation of Pre Hispanic and Contemporary Mayas Through Maternal Linage Ochoa Lugo 2016 1 Villamar Becerril Enrique Estudios de ADN y el origen de los olmecas Arqueologia Mexicana num 150 pp 40 41 2019 2 Archived 27 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine See Grove 1976 or Ortiz de Montellano 1997 References editAdams Richard E W 1991 Prehistoric Mesoamerica Revised ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 2304 4 OCLC 22593466 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1876 The Native Races of the Pacific States of North America Primitive history 1876 Vol 5 D Appleton Benson Elizabeth P 1996 110 Votive Axe In Elizabeth P Benson Beatriz de la Fuente eds Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico To accompany an exhibition at the National Gallery of Art Washington 30 June to 20 October 1996 ed Washington D C National Gallery of Art pp 262 263 ISBN 0 89468 250 4 OCLC 34357584 Bernal I Coe M et al 1973 The Iconography of Middle American sculpture New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art see index Bruhns Karen O Nancy L Kelker Ma del Carmen Rodriguez Martinez Ponciano Ortiz Ceballos Michael D Coe Richard A Diehl Stephen D Houston Karl A Taube Alfredo Delgado Calderon March 2007 Did the Olmec Know How to Write Science Washington D C American Association for the Advancement of Science 315 5817 1365 1366 doi 10 1126 science 315 5817 1365b ISSN 0036 8075 OCLC 206052590 PMID 17347426 S2CID 13481057 Campbell Lyle Terrence Kaufman 1976 A Linguistic Look at the Olmecs American Antiquity Menasha WI Society for American Archaeology 41 1 80 89 doi 10 2307 279044 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 279044 OCLC 1479302 S2CID 162230234 Carlson John B 1975 Lodestone Compass Chinese or Olmec Primacy Multidisciplinary Analysis of an Olmec Hematite Artifact from San Lorenzo Veracruz Mexico Science New Series 189 4205 5 September 1975 pp 753 760 753 Clark John E 2001 Gulf Lowlands South Region In Susan Toby Evans David L Webster eds Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America an Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing pp 340 344 ISBN 0 8153 0887 6 OCLC 45313588 Coe Michael D 1967 San Lorenzo and the Olmec Civilization In Elizabeth P Benson ed Dumbarton Oaks Conference on the Olmec October 28th and 29th 1967 Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Trustees for Harvard University pp 41 72 OCLC 52523439 Archived from the original PDF online reproduction on 8 November 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2008 Coe Michael D 1968 America s First Civilization Discovering the Olmec New York The Smithsonian Library Coe Michael D Rex Koontz 2002 Mexico from the Olmecs to the Aztecs 5th edition revised and enlarged ed London and New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 28346 X OCLC 50131575 Covarrubias Miguel 1977 1946 Olmec Art or the Art of La Venta In Alana Cordy Collins Jean Stern eds Pre Columbian Art History Selected Readings Translated by Robert Pirazzini Reprint of original paper ed Palo Alto CA Peek Publications pp 1 34 ISBN 0 917962 41 9 OCLC 3843930 Covarrubias Miguel 1957 Indian Art of Mexico and Central America Color plates and line drawings by the author ed New York Alfred A Knopf OCLC 171974 Cyphers Ann 1996 2 San Lorenzo Monument 4 Colossal Head In Elizabeth P Benson Beatriz de la Fuente eds Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico To accompany an exhibition at the National Gallery of Art Washington 30 June to 20 October 1996 ed Washington D C National Gallery of Art p 156 ISBN 0 89468 250 4 OCLC 34357584 Cyphers Ann 1999 From Stone to Symbols Olmec Art in Social Context at San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan PDF In David C Grove Rosemary A Joyce eds Social patterns in pre classic Mesoamerica a symposium at Dumbarton Oaks 9 and 10 October 1993 Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection and Trustees for Harvard University pp 155 181 ISBN 0 88402 252 8 OCLC 39229716 Davies Nigel 1982 The Ancient Kingdoms of Mexico Pelican Books series Harmondsworth England Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 022232 4 OCLC 11212208 Diehl Richard 2004 The Olmecs America s First Civilization Ancient peoples and places series London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 02119 8 OCLC 56746987 Filloy Nadal Laura 2001 Rubber and Rubber Balls in Mesoamerica In E Michael Whittington ed The Sport of Life and Death The Mesoamerican Ballgame Published in conjunction with an exhibition of the same name organized by the Mint Museum of Art Charlotte NC ed New York Thames amp Hudson pp 20 31 ISBN 0 500 05108 9 OCLC 49029226 Flannery Kent V Andrew K Balkansky Gary M Feinman David C Grove Joyce Marcus Elsa M Redmond Robert G Reynolds Robert J Sharer Charles S Spencer Jason Yaeger August 2005 Implications of new petrographic analysis for the Olmec mother culture model Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Washington D C National Academy of Sciences 102 32 11219 11223 Bibcode 2005PNAS 10211219F doi 10 1073 pnas 0505116102 ISSN 0027 8424 OCLC 209632728 PMC 1183595 PMID 16061797 Grove David C 1973 Olmec altars and myths Archaeology 26 2 128 135 JSTOR 41685265 Grove David C September 1976 Olmec Origins and Transpacific Diffusion Reply to Meggers American Anthropologist New Series Arlington VA American Anthropological Association and affiliated societies 78 3 634 637 doi 10 1525 aa 1976 78 3 02a00120 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 674425 OCLC 1479294 Grove David C 1981 Olmec monuments Mutilation as a Clue to Meaning In Elizabeth P Benson ed The Olmec and their Neighbors Essays in Memory of Matthew W Stirling Michael D Coe and David C Grove organizers Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Trustees for Harvard University pp 49 68 ISBN 0 88402 098 3 OCLC 7416377 Guimaraes A P June 2004 Mexico and the early history of magnetism PDF Revista Mexicana de Fisica Mexico D F Sociedad Mexicana de Fisica 50 Ensenanza 1 51 53 Bibcode 2004RMxFE 50 51G ISSN 0035 001X OCLC 107737016 Archived from the original on 21 December 2008 Retrieved 9 September 2008 Haughton Brian 2007 Hidden History New Page Books ISBN 978 1 56414 897 1 Joralemon Peter David 1996 Catalogue 53 Figure Seated on a Throne with Infant on Lap in Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico eds E P Benson and B de la Fuente National Gallery of Art Washington D C ISBN 0 89468 250 4 p 218 Joyce Rosemary A Richard Edging Karl Lorenz Susan D Gillespie 1991 Olmec Bloodletting An Iconographic Study PDF In Virginia M Fields volume ed ed Sixth Palenque Roundtable 1986 Sixth Palenque Round Table Conference held 8 14 June 1986 at Palenque Chiapas Mexico Palenque Round Table series vol 8 Merle Greene Robertson series ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press pp 143 150 ISBN 0 8061 2277 3 OCLC 21230103 Lawler Andrew 2007 Beyond the Family Feud Archaeology 60 2 20 25 Magni Caterina 1999 Archeologie du Mexique les Olmeques in French Paris Editions Artcom ISBN 2 912741 24 6 OCLC 43630189 Magni Caterina 2003 Les Olmeques des origines au mythe in French Paris Editions du Seuil ISBN 2 02 054991 3 OCLC 52385926 National Science Foundation 2002 Scientists Find Earliest New World Writings in Mexico 2002 Niederberger Betton Christine 1987 Paleopaysages et archeologie pre urbaine du bassin de Mexico Tomes I amp II published by Centro Frances de Estudios Mexicanos y Centroamericanos Mexico D F Resume Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Ortiz C Ponciano Rodriguez Maria del Carmen 1999 Olmec Ritual Behavior at El Manati A Sacred Space in Social Patterns in Pre Classic Mesoamerica eds Grove D C Joyce R A Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Washington D C pp 225 254 Ortiz de Montellano Bernard Gabriel Haslip Viera Warren Barbour Spring 1997 They Were NOT Here before Columbus Afrocentric Hyperdiffusionism in the 1990s Ethnohistory Durham NC Duke University Press issued by the American Society for Ethnohistory 44 2 199 234 doi 10 2307 483368 ISSN 0014 1801 JSTOR 483368 OCLC 42388116 Pohl Mary Kevin O Pope Christopher von Nagy 2002 Olmec Origins of Mesoamerican Writing Science 298 5600 1984 1987 Bibcode 2002Sci 298 1984P doi 10 1126 science 1078474 PMID 12471256 S2CID 19494498 Pohl Mary Economic Foundations of Olmec Civilization in the Gulf Coast Lowlands of Mexico accessed March 2007 Pool Christopher A 2007 Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica Cambridge World Archaeology Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78882 3 OCLC 68965709 Pope Kevin et al 2001 Origin and Environmental Setting of Ancient Agriculture in the Lowlands of Mesoamerica Science 292 5520 1370 1373 Bibcode 2001Sci 292 1370P doi 10 1126 science 292 5520 1370 PMID 11359011 Reilly III F Kent Art Ritual and Rulership in the Olmec World in Ancient Civilizations of Mesoamerica a Reader Blackwell Publishing Ltd pp 369 395 Rose Mark 2005 Olmec People Olmec Art in Archaeology online the Archaeological Institute of America accessed February 2007 Santley Robert S Michael J Berman Rani T Alexander 1991 The Politicization of the Mesoamerican Ballgame and its Implications for the Interpretation of the Distribution of Ballcourts in Central Mexico In Vernon L Scarborough David R Wilcox eds The Mesoamerican Ballgame Tucson University of Arizona Press pp 3 24 ISBN 0 8165 1180 2 OCLC 51873028 Scarre Chris 1999 The Seventy Wonders of the Ancient World Thames amp Hudson London ISBN 978 0 500 05096 5 Serra Puche Mari Carmen and Fernan Gonzalez de la Vara Karina R Durand V 1996 Daily Life in Olmec Times in Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico eds E P Benson and B de la Fuente National Gallery of Art Washington D C ISBN 0 89468 250 4 pp 262 263 Skidmore Joel 2006 The Cascajal Block The Earliest Precolumbian Writing PDF Mesoweb Reports amp News Mesoweb Retrieved 20 June 2007 Stevenson Mark 2007 Olmec influenced city found in Mexico Associated Press accessed 8 February 2007 Stirling Matthew W 1968 Early History of the Olmec Problem In Elizabeth P Benson ed Dumbarton Oaks Conference on the Olmec October 28th and 29th 1967 Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Trustees for Harvard University pp 1 8 OCLC 52523439 Archived from the original on 8 November 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2008 Stoltman J B et al 2005 Petrographic evidence shows that pottery exchange between the Olmec and their neighbors was two way PNAS 102 32 11213 11218 Bibcode 2005PNAS 10211213S doi 10 1073 pnas 0505117102 PMC 1183596 PMID 16061796 Taube Karl 2004 Olmec Art at Dumbarton Oaks PDF Pre Columbian Art at Dumbarton Oaks No 2 Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Trustees of Harvard University ISBN 0 88402 275 7 OCLC 56096117 Archived from the original PDF on 24 January 2012 VanDerwarker Amber 2006 Farming Hunting and Fishing in the Olmec World University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 70980 3 von Nagy Christopher 1997 The Geoarchaeology of Settlement in the Grijalva Delta In Barbara L Stark Philip J Arnold III eds Olmec to Aztec Settlement Patterns in the Ancient Gulf Lowlands Tucson University of Arizona Press pp 253 277 ISBN 0 8165 1689 8 OCLC 36364149 Wichmann Soren 1995 The Relationship Among the Mixe Zoquean Languages of Mexico Salt Lake City University of Utah Press ISBN 0 87480 487 6 Wichmann Soren Dmitri Beliaev Albert Davletshin September 2008 Posibles correlaciones linguisticas y arqueologicas involucrando a los olmecas PDF Proceedings of the Mesa Redonda Olmeca Balance y Perspectivas Museo Nacional de Antropologia Mexico City March 10 12 2005 in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2008 Retrieved 18 September 2008 Wilford John Noble 15 March 2005 Mother Culture or Only a Sister The New York Times Retrieved 19 September 2008 Williams Howel Robert F Heizer September 1965 Sources of Rocks Used in Olmec Monuments PDF online facsimile Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility Berkeley University of California Department of Anthropology 1 Sources of Stones Used in Prehistoric Mesoamerican Sites 1 44 ISSN 0068 5933 OCLC 1087514 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olmec Drawings and photographs of the 17 colossal heads Stone Etchings Represent Earliest New World Writing Scientific American Ma del Carmen Rodriguez Martinez Ponciano Ortiz Ceballos Michael D Coe Richard A Diehl Stephen D Houston Karl A Taube Alfredo Delgado Calderon Oldest Writing in the New World Science Vol 313 15 September 2006 pp 1610 1614 BBC audio file Discussion of Olmec culture 15 mins A History of the World in 100 Objects Smithsonian Olmec Legacy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olmecs amp oldid 1186573603, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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