- Source: Amotape complex
The Amotape complex is an archaeological culture on the northern coast of Peru dated to between c. 9,000 and 7,100 BCE. It constitutes some of the oldest evidence for human occupation of the Peruvian coast. The Amotape complex was identified by the American anthropologist James Richardson III, who located a dozen small camps in the Peruvian coastal desert at the foot of the Amotape hills, near the modern city of Talara. The people of the Amotope complex were hunter–gatherers who manufactured unifacial stone tools in chalcedony and quartzite to exploit a variety of local plants and animals. They also collected shellfish in the mangrove swamps which covered the coastline at that time.
The contemporary developments at Huaca Prieta and Siches area (north Peru, close to Ecuador) also share similar features.
See also
Lauricocha culture
Paiján culture
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Amotape complex
- Lauricocha culture
- List of Indigenous peoples of South America
- Classification of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas
- Paiján culture
- Huaca Prieta
- Kuhikugu
- Cerro
- List of pre-Columbian cultures
- Anas