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・ Jaguari River (Caí River)
・ Jaguari River (Paraíba do Sul)
・ Jaguari River (Piracicaba River)
・ Jaguariaíva
・ Jaguariaíva River
・ Jaguariaíva River Canyon
・ Jaguaribara
・ Jaguaribe
・ Jaguaribe River
・ Jaguaricatu River
・ Jaguaricatu River Canyon
・ Jaguaripe
・ Jaguarita l'Indienne
・ Jaguarizinho River
・ Jaguariúna
Jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures
・ Jaguars of Colombia
・ Jaguars Radio Network
・ Jaguars south of the Amazon River
・ Jaguars–Titans rivalry
・ Jaguaruana
・ Jaguaruna
・ Jaguaruna Regional Airport
・ Jaguarundi
・ Jaguarão
・ Jaguarão (micro-region)
・ Jaguarão River
・ Jaguaré
・ Jaguaré (district of São Paulo)
・ Jaguaré Bezerra de Vasconcelos


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Jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures : ウィキペディア英語版
Jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures

The representation of ''jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures'' has a long history, with iconographic examples dating back to at least the mid-Formative period of Mesoamerican chronology. The jaguar (''Panthera onca'') is an animal with a prominent association and appearance in the cultures and belief systems of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican societies. Quick, agile, and powerful enough to take down the largest prey in the jungle, the jaguar is the largest of the big cats in the Americas, and one of the most efficient and aggressive predators. Endowed with a spotted coat and well adapted for the jungle, hunting either in the trees or water, making it one of the few felines tolerant of water, the jaguar was, and remains, revered among the indigenous Americans who live closely with the jaguar.
All major Mesoamerican civilizations prominently featured a jaguar god, and for many, such as the Olmec, the jaguar was an important part of shamanism.〔Miller & Taube, p. 103.〕
==Olmecs, jaguars, and the "were-jaguar"==

The Olmec civilization was first defined as a distinctive art style at the turn of the nineteenth century. The various sculpture, figurines, and celts from what now is recognized as the Olmec heartland on the southern Gulf Coast, reveal that these people knew their jungle companions well and incorporated them into their mythology.
In the surviving Olmec archaeological record, jaguars are rarely portrayed naturalistically, but rather with a combination of feline and human characteristics. These feline anthropomorphic figures may range from a human figure with slight jaguar characteristics to depictions of shamanistic transformations in the so-called transformative pose, kneeling with hands on knees, to figures that are nearly completely feline.
One of the most prominent, distinctive, and enigmatic Olmec designs to appear in the archaeological record has been the "were-jaguar". Seen not only in figurines, the motif also may be found carved into jade “votive axes” and celts, engraved onto various portable figurines of jade, and depicted on several "altars", such as those at La Venta. Were-jaguar babies are often held by a stoic, seated adult male.
The were-jaguar figure is characterized by a distinctive down-turned mouth with fleshy lips, almond-shaped eyes, and a cleft head similar – it is said – to that of the male jaguar which has a cleft running vertically the length of its head.
It is not known what the were-jaguar represented to the Olmec, and it may well have represented different things at different times.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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