The
Valdivia Culture is one of the oldest settled
cultures recorded in the Americas.
It emerged from the earlier Las Vegas culture and thrived on the
Santa
Elena
peninsula near the modern-day town of Valdivia, Ecuador
between 3500
BC and 1800 BC.

map of Valdivia Culture
The Valdivia culture was discovered in 1956 by the Ecuadorian
archeologist Emilio Estrada.
Based on comparison of
archeological remains and pottery styles
(specifically, the similarity between the Valdivian pottery and the
ancient Jōmon culture on the
island of Kyūshū
, Japan
) Estrada,
along with the American archaeologist Betty Meggers suggested that a relationship
between the people of Ecuador and the people of Japan existed in
ancient times. Part of the theory was that the Japanese had
conducted trans-Pacific
trade. This theory was controversial, for no evidence of
contact between the two populations had previously been suggested,
and it remains unsupported within the archaeological
community.
The Valdivia lived in a community that built its houses in a circle
or oval around a central
plaza and were
sedentary people that lived off farming
and fishing, though occasionally they went hunting for
deer. From the remains that have been found, it has
been determined that Valdivians cultivated
maize,
kidney beans,
squash,
cassava,
hot peppers and
cotton plants, the latter of which was used
to make clothing.
Valdivian pottery initially was rough and practical, but it became
splendid, delicate and large over time. They generally used red and
gray colors; and the polished dark red pottery is characteristic of
the Valdivia period. In their
ceramics and
stone works, the Valdivia culture shows a progression from the most
simple to much more complicated works.
The trademark Valdivia piece is the "
Venus" of Valdivia: feminine ceramic
figures which were likely used in a variety of unknown rituals of
fertility. The "Venus" of Valdivia
likely represented actual people, as each figurine is individual
and unique, as can be seen by the
hairstyles.
They were made joining two rolls of clay, leaving the lower portion
separated as legs and making the body and head from the top
portion. The arms were usually very short, in most cases were bent
towards the chest, holding the
breasts or
under the chin.
There is a display of Valdivian artifacts in Guayaquil, Ecuador at
UEES
External links