Intermediate Area
Between the highly developed civilizations of Mesoamerica and the
South American Andes lies a region archaeologists have dubbed the
“Intermediate Area.” Comprising parts of El Salvador, Honduras,
Ecuador, and Venezuela, and all of Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua,
and Colombia, at the time of the European invasion it was by no
means a unified political territory but rather was divided among
many small rival chiefdoms. Although the people of the Intermedi-
ate Area did not produce monumental architecture on the scale of
their neighbors to the north and south and, unlike the Mesoameri-
cans, left no written records, they too were consummate artists. Pot-
ters in the Intermediate Area made some of the earliest ceramics of
the Americas, and they continued to create an astonishing variety of
terracotta vessels and figures until the time of the Spanish conquest.
Among the other arts practiced in the Intermediate Area were stone
sculpture and jade carving. Inhabitants throughout the region
prized goldworking, and the first Europeans to make contact here
were astonished to see the natives nearly naked but covered in gold
jewelry. The legend of El Dorado, a Colombian chief who coated
himself in gold as part of his accession rites, was largely responsible
for the Spanish invaders’ ruthless plunder of the region.
TAIRONAIn northern Colombia (MAP14-2), the Sierra Nevada
de Santa Marta rises above the Caribbean. The topography of lofty
mountains and river valleys provided considerable isolation and fos-
tered the independent development of various groups. The inhabi-
tants of this region after about 1000 CEincluded a group known as
the Tairona, whose metalwork is among the finest of all the ancient
American goldworking styles. MAP14-2Early sites in Andean South America.
Sipán
Moche
Chavín de
Huántar
Wari
Tiwanaku
Paracas
Nasca
Bogotá
Quito
Lima
Cusco
La Paz
PACIFIC
OCEAN
PACIFIC
OCEAN
Caribbean SeaCaribbean Sea
Lake Titicaca
AmazonR.
Or
inoc
oR.
Sierra Nevada
del Cocuy
Sierra Nevada
de Santa Marta
A
nd
es
COSTA RICA
NICARAGUA
PANAMA
COLOMBIA
VENEZUELA
PERU
BRAZIL
CHILE
BOLIVIA
ECUADOR
TAIRONA
0 250 500 miles
0 250 500 kilometers
Archaeological site
14-17Colossal atlantids, pyramid B, Toltec, Tula, Mexico, ca.900–1180 CE. Stone, each 16high.
The colossal statue-columns of Tula portraying warriors armed with darts and spear-throwers reflect the military regime of the
Toltecs, whose arrival in central Mexico coincided with the decline of the Maya.
1 ft.
Intermediate Area 379