Greater Chiriquí Region

Visit the Aguila De Osa Forest in Costa Rica



Click the image to take a spin through the Aguila de Osa forest as it has likely appeared to the indigenous peoples of the Chiriquí Region since Pre-Columbian times.

The Greater Chiriquí Region Panel


Early Chiriqui peoples cultivated manioc, maize, palm fruit, and avocado; hunted deer, peccary, and birds; fished; and gathered wild foods. By about AD 400, they relied heavily on maize agriculture and occupied villages of more than 150 people with central plazas. Leaders of the largest villages rose in prominence, signaling their power by building large conical houses atop stone platforms, sometimes flanked by monumental stone spheres. Towns with a resident chief boasted plazas and cemeteries with stone statuary. Gold jewelry replaced jadeite objects as chiefly symbols. Villages may have specialized in producing jewelry, ceramics, or other high-quality crafts, and their exchange connected people across the region.

THE GREATER CHIRIQUI´ REGION
LA REGIO´N DE GRAN CHIRIQUI´


Los primeros pobladores de Chiriqui cultivaban mandioca, maiz, frutos de palma y aguacate; cazaban ciervos, javefcias y aves; pescaban y recogian alimentos silvestres. Alrededor de 400 dC, su subsistencia dependia mucho del cultivo del maiz y vivian en pueblos de mas de 150 personas con plazas centrales. La importancia de los lideres de las aldeas mas grandes fue aumentando y para manifestaiia se construyeron grandes ca conicas sobre plataformas de piedra, que algunas veces estabar rodeadas de esferas monumentales de piedra. Los pueblos con un jefe que residia alii se enorgullecian de sus plazas y cementerios que tenian estatuas de piedra. Las joyas de oro fueron remplazando a los objetos de jadeita como simbolos d poder. Las aldeas quizas se especializaban en la produccion de joyas, piezas de ceramics, u otras artesanias de alta calida y e) intercambio de estos objetos vinculaba a las personas en toda la region.

No comments:

Post a Comment