Mortuary Practices and Ritual Associations: Shamanic Elements in Prehistoric Funerary Contexts in South AmericaArchaeopress, 2001 - 143 páginas This volume has its origins in a symposium on South American Prehistory that took place at the Chicago 64th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology in 1999. The 11 papers here reveal a pre-Hispanic world rich in metaphor and symbolism relating human beings to their origins and ancestral past, the wider natural world and their place within it. The shamanic world is one wherein symbols and symbolic behaviour are actively employed in mediating with the 'Otherworld' and its visionary inhabitants. The sites visited include Macchu Picchu, the Moche Mountains, and Coastal Ecuador. |
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Página 74
... crania - probably rats - distributed around the circular sides of the bottom of the pit in Trench A. A human radius bone was also found in the upper midden contexts of Trench A , modified at each end of the diaphysis in a manner to ...
... crania - probably rats - distributed around the circular sides of the bottom of the pit in Trench A. A human radius bone was also found in the upper midden contexts of Trench A , modified at each end of the diaphysis in a manner to ...
Página 80
... crania with any confidence to individual bone groups , however , such as the crania at the west side of the pit , which had been set rather apart , perhaps suggesting a particular significance attached to them . It is possible that one ...
... crania with any confidence to individual bone groups , however , such as the crania at the west side of the pit , which had been set rather apart , perhaps suggesting a particular significance attached to them . It is possible that one ...
Página 123
... crania represent the remains of two adult individuals ( one male , one female ) and an adolescent of indeterminate sex ( John Verano personal communication ) . The funerary objects deposited with this interment were a bottle , two jars ...
... crania represent the remains of two adult individuals ( one male , one female ) and an adolescent of indeterminate sex ( John Verano personal communication ) . The funerary objects deposited with this interment were a bottle , two jars ...
Índice
Shamanic Cosmology Embodied in Valdivia VIIVIII Mortuary Contexts from the Site | 19 |
Fruitful Death The Symbolic Meanings of Cucurbits in the Late Formative Period of Coastal Ecuador | 37 |
Making Spiritual Contact Snuff Tubes and Other Mortuary Objects from Coastal Ecuador | 51 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Mortuary Practices and Ritual Associations: Shamanic Elements in Prehistoric ... Society for American Archaeology. Meeting Visualização de excertos - 2001 |
Mortuary Practices and Ritual Associations: Shamanic Elements in Prehistoric ... Society for American Archaeology. Meeting Visualização de excertos - 2001 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
adult ancestors ancient Andean anthropomorphic archaeological artifacts associated axis mundi birds body bones burial practices Buritaca cemetery ceramic ceremonial Chorrera clay coastal Ecuador coca complex cosmology crania cultural Cuzco depicted Donnan Ecuador edited El Oro Province elite Emerenciana Estrada ethnographic evidence excavated Falda female Figure figurines flexed funerary practices Gaira gender gourd grave Guancavilca Guayaquil Guayas Helms Huaca human sacrifice iconography Inca indigenous individuals inhumation interpretation interred Kogi La Falda Lathrap López Viejo Machu Picchu male Manabí Manabí Province Manteño Moche Moche art Moche iconography Mortuary Practices mountain scenes Museo Museum offerings period Peru Phase pottery prehistoric priests realms region Reichel-Dolmatoff religion religious remains represented ritual activities sacred San Marcos Santa Marta secondary burials shamanic shell skeleton skull social South American Staller stone structure suggests supernatural symbolic Tairona tomb Tree mythology tubes unburnt underworld University Press Valdivia Valdivia culture vessels Wilbert World Tree Zevallos