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Human ear,

900–600 B.C.

Olmec style
Middle Formative
2016-1119
Olmec Stone-Carving Concurrent with the shift of Olmec political power from San Lorenzo, Veracruz, to La Venta, Tabasco, around 1000 b.c., widely distributed Olmec-style ceramics fade from the archaeological record, to be replaced by fine, small-scale carvings in stone, especially blue-green jadeite and serpentine. Incised jewelry, so-called "spoons," masklike faces, and complexly modeled animal, human,
and supernatural figures, all carved in Olmec style, have been discovered from Costa Rica to the central Mexican Highlands to the southwest Mexican coast in the present-day state of Guerrero.

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Information

Title
Human ear
Dates

900–600 B.C.

Medium
Greenstone
Dimensions
h. 5.8 cm., w. 4.3 cm., d. 1.0 cm. (2 5/16 x 1 11/16 x 3/8 in.)
Credit Line
Bequest of Gillett G. Griffin
Object Number
2016-1119
Place Made

North America, Mexico, Guerrero

Materials