"The first truly complete and authoritative
account of this 3,000-year-old culture." Michael D. Coe
NEW IN PAPERBACK
ANCIENT PEOPLES AND PLACES SERIES
The Olmecs of southern Mexico are America's oldest civilization
and Mesoamerica's "Mother Culture." Famous for
their Colossal Heads carved from giant boulders, the
Olmecs have fascinated the public and archaeologists
since the 1940s when National Geographic magazine
reported the initial explorations of their centers. Despite
well-publicized discoveries of spectacular basalt sculptures,
portable jade objects, and richly decorated pottery
vessels, until recently almost nothing was known about
Olmec history, foreign contacts, and daily life. Now
archaeologists have recovered information that allows
them to assemble a remarkably broad picture of Olmec
culture, its accomplishments, and its impact on later
Mexican civilizations.
The Olmecs presents the first modern overview of information
from recent archaeological field projects and studies
of Olmec art. In addition to detailed coverage of
Olmec life, culture, and art, it examines the Olmec presence
in the surrounding areas of Mexico and their role in
the formation of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilization.
Profusely illustrated, it will become the standard
work on this enigmatic culture.
Richard A. Diehl is Professor of Anthropology at the
University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa. He has conducted
archaeological investigations in Mexico at Tula and the
Basin of Mexico, as well as San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán, La
Mojarra, and Matacapan in southern Veracruz state.
ALSO OF INTEREST:
The Aztecs
The Maya
Mexico
ISBN 0-500-528503-9
· 61/4" x 91/2"
· 152 illustrations, 20 in color · 208 pages · ARCHAEOLOGY
Hardcover edition: 0-500-02119-8
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