Tierras Largas
Tierras Largas is a formative-period archaeological site located in the Etla arm in the Valley of Oaxaca in Mexico. It is considered to be one of the first villages where sedentism originated in the Oaxaca area. The name is Spanish for “Long Lands”.
Overview
Tierras Largas is categorized as a smaller, hamlet village in its region. Located on fertile soils, it was a farming village that contributed resources to the larger governing chiefdom of San José Mogote, 10 kilometers north of Tierras Largas. Tierras Largas has seven sub-phases spread over the Early and Middle Formative periods. There are no signs of population expansion in Tierras Largas. The site is known to excavators for its house clusters, which are common amongst smaller villages in the Oaxaca Valley.Village
Tierras Largas was not a largely populated village in mesoamerica. Throughout its seven phase lifespan, the village housed a small farming community that would provide agriculture including maize, avocados, beans, and squash for the larger nearby village of San José Mogote. This small farming community neither grew nor shrunk drastically in size, and throughout each of its phases, the village had a consistent number of houses.Art
Many forms of art have been recovered from Tierras Largas, “people used imported shell to make beads, and pendants”. Most small villages had pottery vessels that had either earthquake or lightning motifs on them. Almost all pottery vessels with motifs recovered from Tierras Largas favoured earthquakes and had them and earth related motifs on them.Artifacts found at the site
- Avocado pits and presence of beans
- Deer bones
- Finished mirrors
- Complete mano and metate
- Large complete jar
- Broken figurine
- Piece of carbonized wood for matting
- Portion of a second jar
- Chert cores
- Scrapers
- Retouch flakes
- Sherd discs