Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-02T20:45:02.475Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Early Man in the Maya Area

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

William R. Coe, II*
Affiliation:
University MuseumPhiladelphia, Pa

Extract

The Maya area has yielded little in the way of Early Man, although certain discoveries, like that at Santa Isabel Iztapan (Aveleyra and Maldonado 1953), have unquestionably established hunters of now extinct fauna in the Valley of Mexico. In Guatemala only a peculiarly cut sloth bone suggests human co-existence with Upper Pleistocene fauna (Shook 1951: 93, 96). But, apart from these, one can only note two other finds, both made some years ago, one at Concepcion, Campeche, Mexico, the other in the Peten, Guatemala. These latter ‘discoveries have been treated in a few important studies as containing either sure or probable remnants of a fundamental, early Mesoamerican horizon. I strongly feel that before these particular finds achieve widespread acceptance, in print or otherwise, as except tionally ancient, they should be re-examined especially from the comparative standpoint.

The Concepción artifacts and those from the Peten were, for the most part, percussion-flaked flint implements, bifaced, usually with one end rounded, the other relatively pointed, and with unretouched edges, not unlike the Acheulian hand ax of Europe.

Type
Facts and Comments
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1954

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aveleyra Arroya De Anda, Luis 1950 Prehistoria de Mexico. Ediciones Mexicanos, Mexico.Google Scholar
Aveleyra Arroya De Anda, LUIS and Maldonado-Koerdell, Manuel 1953 Association of Artifacts with Mammoth in the Valley of Mexico. American Antiquity, Vol. 18, No. 4, pp. 332–40. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
CASO, ALFONSO 1953 New World Culture History: Middle America. In Anthropology Today, An Encyclopedic Inventory, prepared under the chairmanship of Kroeber, A. L., pp. 226–37. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
COE, W. R. n.d. The Artifacts, Caches, and Burials of Piedras Negras, Guatemala. M.A. thesis, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
HELMUT, DE TERRA, ROMERO, JAVIER, AND STEWART, T. D. 1949 Tepexpan Man. Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology, No. 11. New York.Google Scholar
DRUCKER, PHILIP 1952 La Venta, Tabasco: A Study of Olmec Ceramics and Art. Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 153. Washington.Google Scholar
ENGERRAND, J. 1912 Le Huella Mas Antigua Quizá del Hombre en la Peninsula de Yucatan. Reseña, 17th International Congress of Americanists, Mexico, 1910, pp. 89–100. Mexico.Google Scholar
KIDDER, A. V. 1947 The Artifacts of Uaxactun, Guatemala, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publication 576. Washington.Google Scholar
LONGYEAR, JOHN M. III, 1952 Copan Ceramics: A Study of Southeastern Maya Pottery. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publication 597. Washington.Google Scholar
MALDONADO-KOERDELL, MANUEL 1949 Las Industrias Prehistóricas de Mexico. Anales del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historía, Tomo III, pp. 9–16. Mexico.Google Scholar
MüLLERRIED, F. 1928 Sobre los Artefactos de Piedra de la Parte Central y Occidental del Petén, Guatemala…. Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropologicos, Vol. 2, pp. 71–101. Mexico.Google Scholar
SHOOK, EDWIN M. 1951 The Present Status of Research on the Pre-Classic Horizons in Guatemala. In “The Civilizations of Ancient America,Selected Papers of the XXIXth International Congress of Americanists[New York, 1949], pp. 93–100. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar