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A work made of volcanic stone.

Ceremonial Grinding Table (Metate) in the Form of a Feline

500–1000

Nicoya Nicoya, Guanacaste province, Costa Rica

Nicoya

In Central America, Mexico, and the southwestern United States, flat stone grinders (metates) were used to prepare cornmeal and corn dough for cooking. Sculptors in ancient Costa Rica developed elaborate metate forms as symbols of sustenance; large, finely carved examples often feature effigies as emblems of a ruler or religious official. Metates have been discovered in burials, where they served as biers for deceased leaders, but they were probably primarily intended as throne-like seats for chieftains, thereby linking rulers’ political power to their obligation to ensure abundant harvests to sustain their communities.

Volcanic stone

Arts of the Americas

Latin American