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Tequendama

Tequendama is a preceramic and ceramic archaeological site located southeast of Soacha, Cundinamarca, Colombia, a couple of kilometers east of Tequendama Falls. It consists of multiple evidences of late Pleistocene to middle Holocene population of the Bogotá savanna, the high plateau in the Colombian Andes. Tequendama was inhabited from around 11,000 years BP, and continuing into the prehistorical, Herrera and Muisca periods, making it the oldest site of Colombia, together with El Abra, located north of Zipaquirá.[2][3] Younger evidences also from the Herrera Period have been found close to the site of Tequendama in Soacha, at the construction site of a new electrical plant. They are dated at around 900 BCE to 900 AD.[4][5]

Tequendama
Location within Colombia
LocationSoacha, Cundinamarca
RegionAltiplano Cundiboyacense,
 Colombia
Coordinates4°32′06.42″N 74°16′32.47″W / 4.5351167°N 74.2756861°W / 4.5351167; -74.2756861
Altitude2,570 m (8,432 ft)
TypeCave, rock shelter
Part ofPre-Muisca sites
History
AbandonedColonial period (>1537)
PeriodsPrehistory-Herrera-Muisca
CulturesHerrera-Muisca
Site notes
ArchaeologistsHammen, Correal[1]
Public accessYes
class=notpageimage|
Tequendama and other prehistoric sites on the Bogotá savanna
The Bogotá River, close to Tequendama

The most important researchers who since 1969 contributed on the knowledge about Tequendama were Dutch geologist and palynologist Thomas van der Hammen and archaeologist and anthropologist Gonzalo Correal Urrego.[1]

Etymology Edit

The name Tequendama means in the Muysccubun: "he who precipitates downward".[6]

Background Edit

 
Map of the Bogotá River, Tequendama is situated on the right bank between Soacha and Tequendama Falls

During the time before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca, the central highlands of the Colombian Andes (Altiplano Cundiboyacense) were populated first by prehistorical indigenous groups, then by people from the Herrera Period, and finally by the Muisca.

Various sites of ancient population have been uncovered during the second half of the 20th and early 21st century, such as Tibitó, Aguazuque, Checua, El Abra and Tequendama.

Description Edit

 
Evidence for the domestication of guinea pigs has been found at Tequendama

The site of Tequendama consists of four cave and overhang locations at close distance to each other, called Tequendama I (~11,000-10,000 years BP), II (9500-8300 BP), III (7000-6000 BP) and IV (2500-450 BP).[2] The cave sites have been inhabited probably because of the access to fresh water; the Bogotá River currently flows very close to the site and also the Funza River was nearby.[1]

During the last phase, Tequendama IV, inside the caves and under the overhanging rocks, living constructions were built. At this time it was already ceramic; evidence of the use of pottery was found. The rock art of Tequendama dates to this last phase.[2] In an area, dated at around 2000 years BP, signs of domestication of guinea pigs have been found.[2][7]

The sites of Tequendama were probably inhabited by semi-nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes of maximum 15 individuals. Fruits and land snails were among the food of the people, together with deer and rodents. Areas with fire pits have been found, together with hunting tools, as well as evidence of food preparation and consumption. The most dominant knives, used as scraper tools, found in Tequendama II, III and IV, were also the predominant tools of Checua.[8] More to the outside of the overhangs evidence of animal skin processing has been discovered. The waste was collected in a ditch outside of the overhangs.[2]

Tequendama I Edit

Tequendama I is situated at an altitude of 2,570 metres (8,430 ft) and radiocarbon dating has provided oldest ages between 12,500 and 10,100 years BP.[9] Occupation of Tequendama I continued until approximately 5000 years BP.[10] The first inhabitants have been analysed with the help of the tools of Quaternary geology, as well as using pollen analysis; the dates of 12,500 to 11,000 years BP have been produced. At that time, the paleoclimate was less cold and more humid than today. Lake Fúquene was overflowing rapidly on the Bogotá savanna during this Guantivá interstadial.[9]

During the next phase, of El Abra, dated at 11,000 to 9500 years BP, the climate was colder again and the previously retreating glaciers in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes were advancing. The people who inhabited the high plateau were hunter-gatherers and mainly consumed white-tailed deer and brocket deer (40% of the remains found),[11] and to a lesser extent cotton rats, guinea pigs, cottontail rabbits and other animals such as the nine-banded armadillo, tayra and kinkajous.[12] The bones found were in most cases fragmented which suggests the people were eating the bone marrow and used them as tools and decoration. Different from the Colombian site of Tibitó, in Tequendama no remains of Pleistocene megafauna have been found.[13]

Following the colder phase, as of 10,000 or 9500 years BP, the Andean forests returned and more evidences of rodents and less of deer have been found at Tequendama.[14][15]

The tools, mainly made of chert, found at Tequendama I are the result of careful elaboration, more so than at El Abra.[13] More than half of the tools found were primitive knives.[12]

From the 6th millennium BCE (8000 years BP) onwards, the rock shelter areas were less populated; the population seems to have shifted to the plains of the Bogotá savanna.[14]

Twenty bone samples analysed at Tequendama were predominantly males (60%). Children (20%) and women (15%) formed a minor fraction of the remains found.[16] More than 95% of the bones were intact.[17] Evidence of funeral practices have been found at Tequendama.[18] The traditional way of burying the bodies was with their heads towards the east.[19]

Named after Tequendama Edit

Tequendama appears in various present-day names. The public parking company, Parqueaderos Tequendama Ltda., founded in 1985, is named after Tequendama.[20]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c (in Spanish) Investigaciones arqueologógicas en los abrigos rocosos del Tequendama
  2. ^ a b c d e (in Spanish) Nivel Paleoindio. Abrigos rocosos del Tequendama Archived 2016-04-29 at archive.today
  3. ^ Gómez Mejía, 2012, p.153
  4. ^ (in Spanish) El descubrimiento arqueológico más grande de Colombia - Semana
  5. ^ (in Spanish) Aldea premuisca enreda transmisión de luz a Bogotá - El Espectador
  6. ^ (in Spanish) Etymology Tequendama
  7. ^ Correal Urrego, 1990, p.13
  8. ^ Groot de Mahecha, 1992, p.51
  9. ^ a b Briceño Rosario, 2010, p.100
  10. ^ Rivera Pérez, 2013, p.73
  11. ^ Correal Urrego, 1990, p.7
  12. ^ a b Correal Urrego, 1990, p.8
  13. ^ a b Briceño Rosario, 2010, p.101
  14. ^ a b Correal Urrego, 1990, p.10
  15. ^ Nieto Escalante et al., 2010, p.95
  16. ^ Gómez Mejía, 2012, p.154
  17. ^ Gómez Mejía, 2012, p.157
  18. ^ Rivera Pérez, 2013, p.74
  19. ^ Rodríguez, 2005, p.123
  20. ^ (in Spanish) Parqueaderos Tequendama Ltda - official website

Bibliography Edit

  • Briceño Rosario, Jesús Gregorio. 2010. Las tradiciones líticas del Pleistoceno tardío en la quebrada Santa María, costa norte del Peru. Una contribución al conocimiento de las puntas de proyectíl Paleoindias Colas de Pescado - The lithic traditions of the Late Pleistocene in the quebrada Santa María, north coast of Peru. A contribution to the knowledge of projectile points of the Fish Tail Paleoindians (PhD), 1–375. Free University of Berlin. Accessed 2016-07-08.
  • Cardale de Schrimpff, Marianne. 1985. En busca de los primeros agricultores del Altiplano Cundiboyacense - Searching for the first farmers of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense, 99–125. Banco de la República. Accessed 2016-07-08.
  • Correal Urrego, Gonzalo. 1990. Evidencias culturales durante el Pleistoceno y Holoceno de Colombia - Cultural evidences during the Pleistocene and Holocene of Colombia. Revista de Arqueología Americana 1. 69–89. Accessed 2016-07-08.
  • Gómez Mejía, Juliana. 2012. Análisis de marcadores óseos de estrés en poblaciones del Holoceno Medio y Tardío incial de la sabana de Bogotá, Colombia - Analysis of bone stress markers in populations of the Middle and Late Holocene of the Bogotá savanna, Colombia. Revista Colombiana de Antropología 48. 143–168. Accessed 2016-07-08.
  • Groot de Mahecha, Ana María. 1992. Checua: Una secuencia cultural entre 8500 y 3000 años antes del presente - Checua: a cultural sequence between 8500 and 3000 years before present, 1–95. Banco de la República. Accessed 2016-07-08.
  • Nieto Escalante, Juan Antonio; Claudia Inés Sepulveda Fajardo; Luis Fernando Sandoval Sáenz; Ricardo Fabian Siachoque Bernal; Jair Olando Fajardo Fajardo; William Alberto Martínez Díaz; Orlando Bustamante Méndez, and Diana Rocio Oviedo Calderón. 2010. Geografía de Colombia - Geography of Colombia, 1–367. Instituto Geográfico Agustín Codazzi.
  • Rivera Pérez, Pedro Alexander. 2013. Uso de fauna y espacios rituales en el precerámico de la sabana de Bogotá - Use of fauna and ritual spaces in the preceramic of the Bogotá savanna. Revista ArchaeoBIOS 7-1. 71–86. .
  • Rodríguez, José Vicente. 2005. De la sabana a la selva - Un yacimiento formativo ritual en el entorno de la antigua laguna de La Herrera, Madrid, Cundinamarca - From the savanna to the jungle - a ritual formative site in the surroundings of the ancient Lake Herrera, Madrid. Maguaré 19. 103–131. Accessed 2016-07-08.

External links Edit

  • (in Spanish) Tequendama and other archaeological sites on Rupestreweb

tequendama, other, uses, disambiguation, preceramic, ceramic, archaeological, site, located, southeast, soacha, cundinamarca, colombia, couple, kilometers, east, falls, consists, multiple, evidences, late, pleistocene, middle, holocene, population, bogotá, sav. For other uses see Tequendama disambiguation Tequendama is a preceramic and ceramic archaeological site located southeast of Soacha Cundinamarca Colombia a couple of kilometers east of Tequendama Falls It consists of multiple evidences of late Pleistocene to middle Holocene population of the Bogota savanna the high plateau in the Colombian Andes Tequendama was inhabited from around 11 000 years BP and continuing into the prehistorical Herrera and Muisca periods making it the oldest site of Colombia together with El Abra located north of Zipaquira 2 3 Younger evidences also from the Herrera Period have been found close to the site of Tequendama in Soacha at the construction site of a new electrical plant They are dated at around 900 BCE to 900 AD 4 5 TequendamaLocation within ColombiaLocationSoacha CundinamarcaRegionAltiplano Cundiboyacense ColombiaCoordinates4 32 06 42 N 74 16 32 47 W 4 5351167 N 74 2756861 W 4 5351167 74 2756861Altitude2 570 m 8 432 ft TypeCave rock shelterPart ofPre Muisca sitesHistoryAbandonedColonial period gt 1537 PeriodsPrehistory Herrera MuiscaCulturesHerrera MuiscaSite notesArchaeologistsHammen Correal 1 Public accessYesEl AbraTibitoSuevaclass notpageimage Tequendama and other prehistoric sites on the Bogota savanna The Bogota River close to TequendamaThe most important researchers who since 1969 contributed on the knowledge about Tequendama were Dutch geologist and palynologist Thomas van der Hammen and archaeologist and anthropologist Gonzalo Correal Urrego 1 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Background 3 Description 3 1 Tequendama I 4 Named after Tequendama 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 External linksEtymology EditThe name Tequendama means in the Muysccubun he who precipitates downward 6 Background Edit nbsp Map of the Bogota River Tequendama is situated on the right bank between Soacha and Tequendama FallsDuring the time before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca the central highlands of the Colombian Andes Altiplano Cundiboyacense were populated first by prehistorical indigenous groups then by people from the Herrera Period and finally by the Muisca Various sites of ancient population have been uncovered during the second half of the 20th and early 21st century such as Tibito Aguazuque Checua El Abra and Tequendama Description Edit nbsp Evidence for the domestication of guinea pigs has been found at TequendamaThe site of Tequendama consists of four cave and overhang locations at close distance to each other called Tequendama I 11 000 10 000 years BP II 9500 8300 BP III 7000 6000 BP and IV 2500 450 BP 2 The cave sites have been inhabited probably because of the access to fresh water the Bogota River currently flows very close to the site and also the Funza River was nearby 1 During the last phase Tequendama IV inside the caves and under the overhanging rocks living constructions were built At this time it was already ceramic evidence of the use of pottery was found The rock art of Tequendama dates to this last phase 2 In an area dated at around 2000 years BP signs of domestication of guinea pigs have been found 2 7 The sites of Tequendama were probably inhabited by semi nomadic hunter gatherer tribes of maximum 15 individuals Fruits and land snails were among the food of the people together with deer and rodents Areas with fire pits have been found together with hunting tools as well as evidence of food preparation and consumption The most dominant knives used as scraper tools found in Tequendama II III and IV were also the predominant tools of Checua 8 More to the outside of the overhangs evidence of animal skin processing has been discovered The waste was collected in a ditch outside of the overhangs 2 Tequendama I Edit Tequendama I is situated at an altitude of 2 570 metres 8 430 ft and radiocarbon dating has provided oldest ages between 12 500 and 10 100 years BP 9 Occupation of Tequendama I continued until approximately 5000 years BP 10 The first inhabitants have been analysed with the help of the tools of Quaternary geology as well as using pollen analysis the dates of 12 500 to 11 000 years BP have been produced At that time the paleoclimate was less cold and more humid than today Lake Fuquene was overflowing rapidly on the Bogota savanna during this Guantiva interstadial 9 During the next phase of El Abra dated at 11 000 to 9500 years BP the climate was colder again and the previously retreating glaciers in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes were advancing The people who inhabited the high plateau were hunter gatherers and mainly consumed white tailed deer and brocket deer 40 of the remains found 11 and to a lesser extent cotton rats guinea pigs cottontail rabbits and other animals such as the nine banded armadillo tayra and kinkajous 12 The bones found were in most cases fragmented which suggests the people were eating the bone marrow and used them as tools and decoration Different from the Colombian site of Tibito in Tequendama no remains of Pleistocene megafauna have been found 13 Following the colder phase as of 10 000 or 9500 years BP the Andean forests returned and more evidences of rodents and less of deer have been found at Tequendama 14 15 The tools mainly made of chert found at Tequendama I are the result of careful elaboration more so than at El Abra 13 More than half of the tools found were primitive knives 12 From the 6th millennium BCE 8000 years BP onwards the rock shelter areas were less populated the population seems to have shifted to the plains of the Bogota savanna 14 Twenty bone samples analysed at Tequendama were predominantly males 60 Children 20 and women 15 formed a minor fraction of the remains found 16 More than 95 of the bones were intact 17 Evidence of funeral practices have been found at Tequendama 18 The traditional way of burying the bodies was with their heads towards the east 19 Named after Tequendama EditTequendama appears in various present day names The public parking company Parqueaderos Tequendama Ltda founded in 1985 is named after Tequendama 20 Tequendama Falls Salto del Tequendama 132 metres 433 ft high waterfall to the west of the Bogota savanna in the Bogota River Tequendama Falls Museum museum and former hotel overlooking the waterfall Tequendama Province the province around the falls San Antonio del Tequendama municipality and capital of the Tequendama Province Hotel Tequendama famous hotel in the centre of BogotaSee also Edit nbsp Colombia portal nbsp History portalList of Muisca and pre Muisca sites Tibito Aguazuque Checua El Abra Piedras del Tunjo Herrera PeriodReferences Edit a b c in Spanish Investigaciones arqueologogicas en los abrigos rocosos del Tequendama a b c d e in Spanish Nivel Paleoindio Abrigos rocosos del Tequendama Archived 2016 04 29 at archive today Gomez Mejia 2012 p 153 in Spanish El descubrimiento arqueologico mas grande de Colombia Semana in Spanish Aldea premuisca enreda transmision de luz a Bogota El Espectador in Spanish Etymology Tequendama Correal Urrego 1990 p 13 Groot de Mahecha 1992 p 51 a b Briceno Rosario 2010 p 100 Rivera Perez 2013 p 73 Correal Urrego 1990 p 7 a b Correal Urrego 1990 p 8 a b Briceno Rosario 2010 p 101 a b Correal Urrego 1990 p 10 Nieto Escalante et al 2010 p 95 Gomez Mejia 2012 p 154 Gomez Mejia 2012 p 157 Rivera Perez 2013 p 74 Rodriguez 2005 p 123 in Spanish Parqueaderos Tequendama Ltda official website Bibliography Edit Briceno Rosario Jesus Gregorio 2010 Las tradiciones liticas del Pleistoceno tardio en la quebrada Santa Maria costa norte del Peru Una contribucion al conocimiento de las puntas de proyectil Paleoindias Colas de Pescado The lithic traditions of the Late Pleistocene in the quebrada Santa Maria north coast of Peru A contribution to the knowledge of projectile points of the Fish Tail Paleoindians PhD 1 375 Free University of Berlin Accessed 2016 07 08 Cardale de Schrimpff Marianne 1985 En busca de los primeros agricultores del Altiplano Cundiboyacense Searching for the first farmers of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense 99 125 Banco de la Republica Accessed 2016 07 08 Correal Urrego Gonzalo 1990 Evidencias culturales durante el Pleistoceno y Holoceno de Colombia Cultural evidences during the Pleistocene and Holocene of Colombia Revista de Arqueologia Americana 1 69 89 Accessed 2016 07 08 Gomez Mejia Juliana 2012 Analisis de marcadores oseos de estres en poblaciones del Holoceno Medio y Tardio incial de la sabana de Bogota Colombia Analysis of bone stress markers in populations of the Middle and Late Holocene of the Bogota savanna Colombia Revista Colombiana de Antropologia 48 143 168 Accessed 2016 07 08 Groot de Mahecha Ana Maria 1992 Checua Una secuencia cultural entre 8500 y 3000 anos antes del presente Checua a cultural sequence between 8500 and 3000 years before present 1 95 Banco de la Republica Accessed 2016 07 08 Nieto Escalante Juan Antonio Claudia Ines Sepulveda Fajardo Luis Fernando Sandoval Saenz Ricardo Fabian Siachoque Bernal Jair Olando Fajardo Fajardo William Alberto Martinez Diaz Orlando Bustamante Mendez and Diana Rocio Oviedo Calderon 2010 Geografia de Colombia Geography of Colombia 1 367 Instituto Geografico Agustin Codazzi Rivera Perez Pedro Alexander 2013 Uso de fauna y espacios rituales en el preceramico de la sabana de Bogota Use of fauna and ritual spaces in the preceramic of the Bogota savanna Revista ArchaeoBIOS 7 1 71 86 Rodriguez Jose Vicente 2005 De la sabana a la selva Un yacimiento formativo ritual en el entorno de la antigua laguna de La Herrera Madrid Cundinamarca From the savanna to the jungle a ritual formative site in the surroundings of the ancient Lake Herrera Madrid Maguare 19 103 131 Accessed 2016 07 08 External links Edit in Spanish Tequendama and other archaeological sites on Rupestreweb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tequendama amp oldid 1150010845, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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