San Lorenzo, the center of early Olmec …

Years: 909BCE - 898BCE

San Lorenzo, the center of early Olmec culture, suffers a drastic cultural decline about 900 BCE, probably due to depredations by migrating peoples from the north.

About the time of the center’s decline, the Olmecs bury within the site’s huge artificial ridge, which forms the city’s core, colossal human heads carved of stone, the greatest of which weigh twenty tons or more and are three meters high.

The largest city in Mesoamerica from roughly 1200 BCE to 900 BCE, San Lorenzo seems to have been largely a ceremonial site, a town without city walls, centered in the midst of a widespread medium-to-large agricultural population.

The ceremonial center and attendant buildings could have housed fifty-five hundred while the entire area, including hinterlands, could have reached thirteen thousand.

Although the original site was at a higher elevation than the surrounding countryside, it was further modified through extensive filling and leveling; by one estimate half-a-million to two million cubic meters of earthen fill were needed, moved by the basketload.

San Lorenzo also boasts an elaborate drainage system which uses buried, covered, channeled stones as a type of "pipe".

Some researchers have inferred that the purpose of this system was not only to provide drinking water for the population but for ritual purposes as well, and that the rulership was "intimately linked to the figure of a patron water supernatural.” (Cyphers, Ann (1999) "From Stone to Symbols: Olmec Art in Social Context at San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán", in Social Patterns in Pre-Classic Mesoamerica, Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C., pp. 155 – 181.)

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