Santiago Museum

 

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This statue is from Southern Columbia between 1-500CE. It is “imbued with a solemn peace, impressive for their ability to irradiate the mystery of the sacred.” The sign says so.

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This funny monkey was sculpted by a Chavin sculpture between 1000 and 400 BCE.

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This is a sculpture of a young noble women from the Veracruz culture (300-900 CE).

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This funky pedestal is Mayan from between 300 and 900 CE.

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There was also a sculpture of a man wearing a monkey skin from about 300-900 CE. You can see that it is a skin at the edges around the mouth and eyes.

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You can also see the monkey’s hands with his poking out underneath.

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This is a quipu, the Inca’s only form of written language. This one has 586 cords organized into 8 sections of 10 sets, and is probably some kind of census data.

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The pattern of knots and twisting had meaning to the author and recipient. Very few people in the empire were literate, probably only top officials.

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We still don’t know how to translate it.

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The museum also had some smaller ones.

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These strange carved stone geometric shapes date back to 11000 to 6500 BCE, just after people arrived in America. No one knows what they were used for.

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These mummies were people from the Chinchorro people. They started mummifying people in 6000 BCE, 2000 years before the Egyptians.

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