José Cruxent

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José Maria Cruxent
Venezuelan
SubjectTaima-Taima, Nueva Cádiz, Venezuelan Archaeology, La Isabella

José Maria Cruxent (January 16, 1911 – February 23, 2005) was a professional

archaeologist considered to be the "Father of Scientific Archaeology" in Venezuela.[1] He was born in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Cruxent is known for making significant contributions to understanding the cultural history of Venezuela from the Paleoindian
period to the early Colonial period.

Education

Cruxent was a student in archaeology at the University of Barcelona until the Spanish Civil War cut short his academic career in 1939. After the war, he moved to Venezuela where he eventually gained renown for reshaping its archaeology by applying the scientific method in field work (something that had been rare in archaeological excavations there).

Discoveries

In 1952 Cruxent participate in the Franco-Venezuelan expedition in search of the sources of the Orinoco River and the demarcation of the border with Brazil. the Doctor Marcel Roche invites him to the Archeology department of the Venezuelan Institute of Scientific Research (IVIC); and in collaboration with the American archaeologist Irving Rouse write and publish "Chronological Archeology of Venezuela", in 1958.

Cruxent was responsible for the discovery of archaeological sites at Nueva Cádiz and Taima-Taima. He extended the archaeological evidence for human presence in South America backward into the Late Pleistocene epoch.[2]

It was at Taima-Taima that he discovered

B.P., a major discovery in Paleoindian archaeology.[3]

Cruxent was later asked to excavate La Isabella, the first Spanish settlement, as well as the tomb of Christopher Columbus in the Ciudad Colonial de Santo Domingo.[2]

Museum Administration

Cruxent eventually became the head curator and archaeologist for the

Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas
in Caracas.

Artistic career

In the latter portion of his life, Cruxent became an artist in the abstract expressionism movement.[4] His paintings often depicted his archaeological discoveries and were reminiscent of cave painting. He did not stick to one medium, but rather experimented with many different materials and textures. He continued to work as a professor and artist until his death in 2005 at the age of 94.

Publications

Books

  • Venezuelan Archaeology, 1963
  • An Archaeological Chronology of Venezuela, V2: Social Science Monographs, V6, 20, 1964
  • Archaeology at La Isabela: America's First European Town, 2002

Articles

  • Early Man in the West Indies, 1997
  • Medieval Foothold in the Americas,1997
  • An El Jobo Mastodon Kill at Tiama-Taima, Venezuela, 1978
  • Archaeology of Cotua Island, Amazonas Territory, Venezuela, 1950
  • Determination of the Provenience of Majolica Pottery Found in the Caribbean Area Using Its Gamma-Ray Induced Thermoluminescence, 1975

References

  1. ^ Gonzalez, Gloria (2010). 'Fundación José María Cruxent: Biografía' at
  2. ^ a b Daboín, Whylmhar (2012) 'Jose Maria CRUXENT, PIONEER OF ARCHAEOLOGY VENEZOLANA' at [1]
  3. ^ Oliver, José R. (2003). 'Taima Taima A 13,000 years Old Mastodon Kill Site in Western Venezuela' at "Taima Taima". Archived from the original on 2016-03-14. Retrieved 2016-02-23.
  4. ^ Albornoz, Lina M. and Miguel Angel Prieto (1988).'ARQUEOLOGIA SURAMERICANA : INFLUENCIA DE “EL TECHO DE LA BALLENA” EN LA NUEVA FILOSOFIA ARQUEOLOGICA DEL S.XX.' at https://www.academia.edu/9712196/ARQUEOLOGIA_SURAMERICANA_INFLUENCIA_DEL_TECHO_DE_LA_BALLENA_EN_LA_NUEVA_FILOSOFIA_ARQUEOLOGICA_DEL_S.XX_Lina_Mar%C3%ADa_Albornoz_y_Miguel_Ángel_Prieto_UNOR_1988_