Bennett Monolith
Bennett Monolith | |
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![]() Bennett Monolith on display | |
Material | Sandstone |
Discovered | 1932 |
Discovered by | Wendell C. Bennett |
Present location | Tiwanaku Site Museum, Tiwanaku, Bolivia |
Culture | Tiwanaku |
The Bennett Monolith is a monumental stone sculpture from the pre-Columbian Tiwanaku civilization, located in present-day Bolivia. Standing approximately 7.3 meters (24 feet) tall and weighing around 20 tons, it is the largest known human-carved monolithic statue in the Andean region and the Western hemisphere.
Originally called "Stela 10", the monolith was named after American archaeologist Wendell C. Bennett, who exhumed the artifact in 1932 from the Semi-Subterranean Temple at the Tiwanaku archaeological site.[1][2] It was possibly detected earlier in 1903 by the French Scientific Mission.[3]
The monolith was moved and displayed in a plaza in La Paz, Bolivia. In 2000, it was moved back to Tiwanaku. The structure is currently housed at the Tiwanaku Site Museum, near where it was originally found.
The statue is made of reddish sandstone.[3]
Gallery
[edit]-
First photograph of the monolith in June 1932
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The monolith on display at La Paz
See also
[edit]Media related to Bennett Monolith at Wikimedia Commons
References
[edit]- ^ Silverman, Helaine; Isbell, William (4 April 2008). Handbook of South American Archaeology. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-0-387-75228-0.
- ^ Paolis, Lucio Tommaso De; Arpaia, Pasquale; Sacco, Marco (11 September 2024). Extended Reality: International Conference, XR Salento 2024, Lecce, Italy, September 4–7, 2024, Proceedings, Part III. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-3-031-71710-9.
- ^ a b Criales, Juan Villanueva (7 February 2024). "Drunken Mountains: Analysis of the Bennett and Ponce Monoliths of Tiwanaku (AD 500–1100) from a Multispecies Perspective". Latin American Antiquity: 1–21. doi:10.1017/laq.2023.72. ISSN 1045-6635.