TIAHUANACO


Meaning of TIAHUANACO in English

also spelled Tiwanaku, or Tiwanacu major pre-Columbian civilization known from ruins of the same name that are situated near the southern shore of Lake Titicaca, near the modern town of Tiahuanacu (local official spelling) in Bolivia. Some scholars date the earliest remains found at the site to the early part of the Early Intermediate period (c. 200 BCAD 200); others suggest that the culture is evident in artifacts from the second millennium BC. Probably much of the site, including many of the major buildings, dates from the latter half of the Early Intermediate period (AD 200600); some construction, however, must have continued into the Middle Horizon (AD 6001000), for during this period Tiahuanaco influences are seen at Huari and elsewhere in the central and southern Andes. Viracocha, relief sculpture on the Gateway of the Sun at Tiahuanaco The principal buildings of Tiahuanaco include the Akapana Pyramid, a huge platform mound or stepped pyramid of earth faced with cut andesite; a rectangular enclosure known as the Kalasasaya, constructed of alternating tall stone columns and smaller rectangular blocks; and another enclosure known as the Palacio. A notable feature of the Kalasasaya is a monolithic gateway adorned with the carved central figure of a staff-carrying Doorway God and other subsidiary figures, sometimes referred to as winged messengers (see photograph). A great number of freestanding carved stone figures have also been found at the site. Characteristic pottery is a flared beaker (or kero) form, painted with black, white, and light red designs of pumas, condors, and other creatures on a dark red ground colour. It has been speculated that the people who built the splendid Tiahuanaco complex, whose culture had vanished by AD 1200, were the ancestors of the present-day Aymara Indians of highland Bolivia, who are among the poorest peoples in the Western Hemisphere. In the late 20th century, archaeologists discovered new information concerning the Tiahuanaco site. Formerly thought to have been largely a ceremonial site, the area has been revealed as a once-bustling metropolis, the capital of one of the greatest and most enduring of ancient empires. Its influence was in great measure a result of its remarkable agricultural system. This farming method, known as the raised-field system, consisted of raised planting surfaces separated by small irrigation ditches, or canals. This system was designed in such a way that the canals retained the heat of the intense sunlight during frosty nights on the Altiplano and thus kept the crops from freezing. Algae and aquatic plants that accumulated in the canals were used as organic fertilizer on the raised fields. The resulting agricultural abundance enabled conquest, and, during the height of its power, the Tiahuanaco empire covered large portions of what are now the states of eastern and southern Bolivia, northwestern Argentina, northern Chile, and southern Peru. The revived use of the raised-field system by some Bolivian farmers in the late 20th century resulted in greatly increased agricultural production.

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