Maya, Aztec, Inca
Atacama Desert
A desert located in northern Chile near the border with Peru and the driest place on earth.
Step Pyramid
A pyramid with sides that rise in a series of steps
Gran Chaco
Alluvial plain in interior South America, between the Andes and Paraguay River
Polytheistic
Belief in many gods
floating gardens (chinampas)
Built by the Aztecs because their capital was located on an island.
Tenochtitlan
Capital of the Aztec empire, after the Spanish conquest, it later became Mexico City.
Common food of the Aztec and Maya
Corn
Aztec and Incas both had leaders called
Emperors
Pampas and Llanos
Grasslands of Argentina, South America.
Montezuma
Leader of the Aztecs
Maya and Aztec have in common
Located in Mexico, built pyramids, worshipped many gods, played ball games.
Aztec
Located in the valley of central Mexico, warlike, built capital in center of a lake bed conquered by Cortez. Montezuma was their leader.
Quipa
Long knotted strings that were used by the Incas to keep records of numbers and pass information. Each knot stood for a number.
Maya
Mesoamerican civilization concentrated in Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and in Guatemala and Honduras but never unified into a single empire. Major contributions were in mathematics, astronomy, and development of the calendar.
Mayan cities abandoned
Mysterious. Maybe overpopulation and overuse of the land, endemic warfare, disease or drought? The reason is unknown and these are just theories.
Altiplano (South America)
Peru and Bolivia
Causeways
Raised roads across water or wet ground, used to get in and out of Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital.
Hernan Cortes
Spanish explorer and conquistador who led the conquest of Aztec Empire in 1519-1521 for Spain.
Francisco Pizarro
Spanish explorer who conquered the Incas in what is now Peru and founded the city of Lima (1475-1541).
Inca location
The Inca Empire was located in South America along the western coast and throughout the Andes Mountains.
Reasons for the Inca Defeat
The Spanish had more advanced weapons and took over the Incan roads, but the main reason was through giving the Inca diseases.
Inca Empire
The Western Hemisphere's largest imperial state in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries; built by a relatively small community of Quechua-speaking people (the Inca), the empire stretched some 2,500 miles along the Andes Mountains, which run nearly the entire length of the west coast of South America, and contained perhaps 10 million subjects. The vast and sophisticated Peruvian empire centered at the capital city of Cuzco that was at its peak from 1438 until 1532. It had a social hierarchy, irrigation systems, roads, tunnels and bridges. Kept records, had gold and silver, could send a message 150 miles in one day.
Cuzco
The capital city of the Inca Empire to which all Incan roads linked, located in present-day Peru.
Elevation
The height of land above sea level. The higher the elevation, the cooler the temperature.
Andes Mountains
The world's largest mountain range, stretching along the west coast of South America, through the 7 countries of, Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina.
The Mayans are known for what?
Their architecture, calendar, astronomy, hieroglyphic writing, skilled weaving, pottery and inventing the mathematics concept of zero.
How did the Inca adapt to living in the mountains?
They built suspension bridges.
Inca civilazation ended
When the Spanish, led by Francisco Pizarro, conquered them.
La Niña
Wind and ocean currents that make the region cool, with heavy clouds and strong winds.
El Niño
Wind and ocean currents that make the region warmer and wetter.
Where are the Mayans located?
Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico and northern Central America.