
Mano and Metate
with Bowl
This mano (Spanish for "hand")
and metate (the larger stone surface) were used for grinding corn before
it was cooked.
Corn originated in MesoAmerica
and was grown in Mesa Verde beginning in A.D. 450. By the time Europeans
made contact with Native Americans, more than 350 varieties of corn (or
maize) were being cultivated in North America. Corn was transported to
Spain in the 15th century and is now the 3rd most valuable food crop in
the world.
Ancestral Puebloans were skilled
at "dry farming" (farming without irrigation), which allowed
them to grow crops such as corn that would mature quickly to accommodate
the short growing season. They constructed check dams and other water
and soil conservation devices to take advantage of what little water came
from rainfall and to avoid depleting the fertile soil.
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