000 02228nab a2200313 4500
001 MUSEF-HEM-PPE-091225
003 BO-LP-MUSEF
005 20230609164517.0
008 230602b1982 us ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aBO-LpMNE
041 _aeng
092 _sE
_aAMER-ANT/vol.47(3)/ Jul.1982
100 1 _aDemarest, Arthur
245 _aReports. The dating and cultural associations of the "potbellied" sculptural style: new evidence from western El Salvador.
_cArthur Demarest
260 _aEstados Unidos-US :
_bSociety for American Archaeology,
_c1982.
300 _a557-571 páginas:
_bilustraciones en blanco y negro.
310 _aTrimestral
362 _avol.47; n.3 (Jul.1982)
490 _3American Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology ;
_ano.3
520 _aFor decades the "potbellied" monuments have been the center of a controversy in Mesocamerican archaeology. These massive boulder sculptures have been found at numerous sites associated with the major culture historical problems of the preclassic period in southern Mesoamerica. A secure dating of the style has not been possible and there have been several conflicting interpretations of their age and significance. One interpretation holds that some "potbellies" are among the earliest monumental sculptures in the New World contemporary with, or even ancestral to, the Olmec style. New evidence from the site of Santa Leticia, El Salvador, provides the first secure doting of several "potbellied" monuments and related sculpures. An undisturbed stratigraphic context, dated by both associated ceramics and a C-14 series, indicates that the style is probably a phenomenon of the Late Preclassic period (ca. 500 B.C. to A.D. 100)
653 _aARQUEOLOGIA
653 _aSITIOS ARQUEOLOGICOS
773 0 _0302582
_976641
_aSociety for American Archaeology
_dEstados Unidos-US : Society for American Archaeology, 1982.
_oHEMREV012017
_tAmerican Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology;
_w(BO-LP-MUSEF)MUSEF-HEM-PPE-091220
810 _aSoociety for American Archaeology.
850 _aBO-LpMNE
866 _a1
942 _2ddc
_cPPE
_dCON
_j011
999 _c302635