Page:American Anthropologist NS vol. 1.djvu/52

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE CALCHAQUI: AN ARCHEOLOGICAL PROBLEM[1]

By DANIEL G. BRINTON

The titles given below name but a small fraction of the articles and works which have appeared in the last decade on the ancient tribes of the Calchaqui and the archeology of the area they inhabited.

This fervor of investigation is fully justified by the importance of the questions to be settled. They rank among the first in the palethnology of the South American continent. Nowhere else east of the Andes are found remains of a culture rivaling that of Peru, and rising distinctly into that of the Age of Metals.

What relations did this culture bear to that of the Aymara and Quichua? Was is the child or the parent of the latter? Or does it reveal an independent center of civilization? What were the ethnic and linguistic affiliations of the people who occupied that area at the time of the conquest, and were they the authors of that culture?

These are the inquiries which for years have been engaging the attention of the leading antiquaries in Argentina, and it is my intention at present very briefly to state the conclusions to which they have arrived.

A few descriptive words will not be amiss. The ancient province of Tucumán, of the once viceroyalty of Buenos Aires, lay at

  1. Calchaquí. Por Adán Quiroga. Pp. 492, and app., pp. xxvi. Illustrated. Tucuman, 1897. Vol. 1.
    Notas de Arqueología Calchaquí. Con dibujos. Por J. B. Ambrosetti. Bol. del Instituto Geográfico Argentino, 1896, 1897.
    Die Calchaquis. Von Dr. H. von Ihering. Das Ausland, Jahr. lxiv, Nos. 48, 49.
    Las Ruinas de Watungasta. Las Ruinas de la Fortaleza de Pucará. Por Gunardo Lange. Anales del Museo de la Plata, Seccion de Arqueología, 1892, etc.
    Tesoro de Catamarqueñismos. Por S. A. Lafone Quevedo. Anales de la Sociedad Científicia Argentina, Tom. xxxix.