What is it about?

The famous greenstone figure known as the Tuxtla Statuette is one of only 12 objects known to bear an epi-Olmec inscription and was the first to become known to scholarship. For more than a century its original find-spot was imprecisely and erroneously identified as lying in the township of San Andrés Tuxtla or, more generally, in the Tuxtla Mountains. Correspondence in the National Anthropology Archives of the Smithsonian Institution documents that the figure was found on the Hacienda de Hueyapan de Mimendi, near the colossal head of Tres Zapotes. Archival research in Mexico’s National Museum of Anthropology and the Archivo General del Estado de Veracruz, as well as interviews with descendants of owners of the Hacienda de Hueyapan and the statuette, allow us to confirm several features of the Smithsonian correspondence. The data indicate that the statuette was found within or very near the epi-Olmec regional center of Tres Zapotes and within the township of Santiago Tuxtla.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

This article corrects more than a century of misunderstanding about a key object for scholarship on early writing in Mesoamerica, placing its find spot within or very near the epi-Olmec regional center of Tres Zapotes.

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: The Environs of Tres Zapotes as the Find-Spot of the Tuxtla Statuette, Latin American Antiquity, December 2020, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/laq.2020.61.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page