Las Limas Monument 1 is a greenstone figure of a youth holding a limp were-jaguar baby. Found in the Mexican state of Veracruz in the Olmec heartland, the statue is famous for its incised representations of Olmec supernaturals and is considered by some a "Rosetta stone" of Olmec religion.[1] The largest known greenstone sculpture,[2] it is also known as the Las Limas figure and the Señor de las Limas.
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Sculptures of headdressed figures holding inert were-jaguar babies appear often in the Olmec archaeological record, from the smallest of figurines to the huge table-top thrones such as La Venta Altar 5.
What these sculptures symbolised to the Olmecs is not clear. Some researchers, focusing on the symbolic cave surrounding the figure on Altar 5 believe that these sculptures relate to myths of spiritual journeys or human origins. Others find that the limp depiction of the were-jaguar baby denotes child sacrifice.[3]
The faces of four supernaturals are incised onto the shoulders and shins of Monument 1. Further tattoo-like incisions, but more abstract, cover the youth's face around the mouth and in bands alongside the face.
The four supernaturals show several common Olmec motifs, in particular the cleft head.
Monument 1's iconography has led noted Olmec scholar Michael D. Coe to develop the "Las Limas Hypothesis". Coe believes that the four supernaturals, along with the were-jaguar baby, are representatives of the Olmec pantheon.[5] Coe's student, Peter Joralemon, added three more deities to the five in his widely-cited 1971 paper on Olmec iconography.[6]
The statue is 55 cm (22 in) high, 42 cm (16 in) wide, and weighs an estimated 60 kg (132 lb). It was probably carved during the Middle Formative Period, some time between 1000 to 600 BCE).[7]
The statue was discovered in near Jesús Carranza, Veracruz, by two local children, Rosa and Severiano Paschal Manuel. Dug out and taken to their nearby home, it was declared the "La Virgen de las Limas" and set up on its own altar. Word of the find reached archaeologists in Xalapa. After promising to keep the statue on display — and to build a local school — the archaeologists moved the sculpture to the Xalapa Museum of Anthropology. [8]
Five years later, in October 1970, the statue was stolen from the museum, only later to be found in a motel room in San Antonio, Texas, apparently too famous to be sold on the black market.[9]
It is presently on display at the Museo de Antropología de Xalapa, in Veracruz.