Volcanoes in the pre-Columbian life,legend, and archaeology of Costa Rica (Central America) |
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Authors: | Guillermo E. Alvarado Gerardo J. Soto |
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Affiliation: | 1. Observatorio Sismológico y Vulcanológico de Arenal y Miravalles (OSIVAM), Área de Amenazas y Auscultación Sísmica y Volcánica (A3SV), Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad, Apdo. 10032-1000, San José, Costa Rica;2. Escuela Centroamericana de Geología, Universidad de Costa Rica, Apdo. 214-2060, Ciudad Universitaria Rodrigo Facio, Costa Rica;3. Geocientex, Apdo.360-2350, San Francisco Dos Ríos, Costa Rica |
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Abstract: | Costa Rica is located geographically in the southern part of the Central American Volcanic Front, a zone where interaction between the Mesoamerican and South American cultures occurred in pre-Columbian times. Several volcanoes violently erupted during the Holocene, when the first nomadic human hunters and later settlers were present. Volcanic rocks were the most important geo-resource in making artifacts and as construction materials for pre-Columbian inhabitants. Some pottery products are believed to resemble smoking volcanoes, and the settlements around volcanoes would seem to indicate their influence on daily life. Undoubtedly, volcanic eruptions disrupted the life of early settlers, particularly in the vicinity of Arenal and Irazú volcanoes, where archaeological remains show transient effects and displacement caused by periodical eruptions, but later resilient occupations around the volcanoes. Most native languages are extinct, with the exception of those presently spoken in areas far away from active volcanoes, where no words are related to volcanic phenomena or structures. The preserved legends are ambiguous, suggesting that they were either produced during the early Spanish conquest or were altered following the pre-Columbian period. |
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Keywords: | pre-Columbian prehistoric volcanism volcanic legends archaeology Costa Rica |
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