Tlatilco figurines (from the National Museum of Anthropology, but also including the Female Figure at the Princeton University Art Museum), ceramic, Tlatilco, Mesoamerica (present-day Mexico), c. 1200–600 B.C.E. Speakers: Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank and Dr. Steven Zucker.
Tlatilco is a Nahuatl word, given to this “culture” later. It means “place of hidden things.” We don’t know what the people here called themselves. Around 2000 B.C.E., maize, squash and other crops were domesticated, which allowed people to settle in villages. The settlement of Tlatilco was located close to a lake, and fishing and the hunting of birds became important food sources.
Archaeologists have found more than 340 burials at Tlatilco, with many more destroyed in the first half of the 20th century.
Continue this lesson in the app
Install CourseHive on Android or iOS to keep learning while you move.
FAQs
We curate free YouTube courses, organized by category and language — and make it easy for you to track your learning progress.
Yes. Free courses are embedded YouTube videos.
Currently available in English — with Portuguese, Spanish, French, German, and Italian coming soon.
Check ratings, reviews, duration, and description.
All courses include a certificate of participation.
Yes, an account lets you track progress, earn certificates, and save favorites.
We auto-save your watch position so you can resume on any device.