Sea Lion Pup Vessel, 200-850. Central Andes, North Coast, Moche people, 200-450 AD. Ceramic and slip; overall: x x 16 cm (7 3/4 x 6 1/8 x 6 5/16 in.). Sea lions commonly appear in Moche art as effigy vessels, like this appealing pup, or in complex scenes that often show them as the targets of human hunters. They may have been prized in part for the beach pebbles found in their stomachs; modern Peruvian folk healers consider such pebbles to have powerful medicinal qualities. Also, colonial-period natives believed that sea lions carried the dead to off-shore islands, an idea that coul


Sea Lion Pup Vessel, 200-850. Central Andes, North Coast, Moche people, 200-450 AD. Ceramic and slip; overall: x x 16 cm (7 3/4 x 6 1/8 x 6 5/16 in.). Sea lions commonly appear in Moche art as effigy vessels, like this appealing pup, or in complex scenes that often show them as the targets of human hunters. They may have been prized in part for the beach pebbles found in their stomachs; modern Peruvian folk healers consider such pebbles to have powerful medicinal qualities. Also, colonial-period natives believed that sea lions carried the dead to off-shore islands, an idea that could date to Moche times.


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Photo credit: © CMA/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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