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Discovery of the Chavín Culture in Peru*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Julio C. Tello*
Affiliation:
Lima, Peru

Extract

In 1919, while exploring the basin of the Mariash or Pukcha River, one of the upper Amazon affluents, I found in Chavín de Huantar evidence of a culture that, up to then, had not been given due recognition. I proved that certain buildings and other products of aboriginal art found there belonged to a quite distinctive cycle of culture–that of the Chavín stone culture. Monolithic figures of serpents and felines, representing human heads, and stelae, obelisks, sundry utensils, and other objects decorated with incised or carved figures in plane, high or low relief, representing grotesque felines, serpents, fish, lizards and birds are the main features of this culture, whose area of diffusion had then been reconnoitered only in the provinces of Huari and Pomabama.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1943

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Footnotes

*

This paper represents the result of work undertaken in part under the aegis of the Institute of Andean Research, which has made possible the publication of all of Dr. Tello's illustrations.

References

Middendorf, E. W. 1893–95. Peru Google Scholar
Toribio, Polo José 1899. La Piedra de Chavín Google Scholar
Raimondi, Antonio 1873. El Departamento de Ancachs Google Scholar
Tello, Julio C. 1923. Wira Koch., Inca. Vol. I, pp. 93320, 583-606.Google Scholar
Tello, Julio C. 1929. Antiquo Peru. Primera Parte. Lima.Google Scholar