Bahía culture
Geographical range | Manabí |
---|---|
Period | Regional Development |
Dates | 500 BCE – 500 CE |
Preceded by | Chorrera culture |
Followed by | Manteño civilization |
The Bahía culture (500 BCE–500 CE) was a pre-Columbian culture in Ecuador.[1]
Bahía culture originated in what is now the Manabí Province on the Pacific Coast, and spread to Bahía de Caráquez and to the Andean foothills. Their ceramic tradition is one of the first found north of the Andes.[2]
, a seaport, was a major Bahía archaeological site discovered by Emilio Estrada in the 1950s. Merchants traded finished goods and Spondylus princeps or red spiny oyster shells south to Chile and north as far as Mexico in exchange for precious materials such as copper and gold.[1]
Big-nose figurines
Neck rest
Ear plug
Sorcerer's cauldron
Witch or shaman sculpture
See also[]
Notes[]
- ^ a b "Chirije-Ecuador." (retrieved 3 May 2011)
- ^ "La Bahia." History of Ecuador. (retrieved 3 May 2011)
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bahía culture. |
- Bahía (archaeological culture) artworks, National Museum of the American Indian
Categories:
- History of Ecuador
- Indigenous peoples of the Andes
- Pre-Columbian cultures
- Ecuador stubs