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An Unexplored Realm in the Heartland of the Southern Gulf ... - Famsi

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Figure 5.33. Plan view <strong>of</strong> Olmec throne and Offer<strong>in</strong>gs I and II. The red l<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong>dicates<br />

<strong>the</strong> river cut bank, while <strong>the</strong> blue l<strong>in</strong>e illustrates edge <strong>of</strong> El Marquesillo residents’<br />

digg<strong>in</strong>g (after Hernández 2002).<br />

The <strong>of</strong>fer<strong>in</strong>g filled a U-shaped pit that had been dug close to <strong>the</strong> throne’s<br />

depositional location. The ceramic assemblage began at a depth <strong>of</strong> 1.10 m below <strong>the</strong><br />

present ground surface (Figure 5.34) and extended to a depth <strong>of</strong> 2.25 m. The <strong>in</strong>verted<br />

conical <strong>of</strong>fer<strong>in</strong>g had an upper diameter <strong>of</strong> 1.6 m and tapered to 1 m at its bottom (Figure<br />

5.35). Obsidian prismatic blades and flakes, basalt fragments, pieces <strong>of</strong> chapapote or<br />

asphalt, portions <strong>of</strong> burned clay, and f<strong>in</strong>e sand were all mixed with <strong>the</strong> ceramic pieces <strong>in</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> lowest portion <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> feature. Pieces <strong>of</strong> very small bones, attributed to an unidentified<br />

species <strong>of</strong> bird, were also present (Hernández and Barrera 2002:27).<br />

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