Sep 4, 2008

   
LOGIN | SUBSCRIBE | GUIDEBOOKS | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US |
| Home
| Top Story
| Business & Real Estate
| Arts, Travel & Fishing >
| The Nica Times
| Daily News
| Letters to the Editor
| Photo Galleries >
| Classified Ads >
| Exchange Rates
Central Bank
Reference Rate

BUY ¢548.16 SELL ¢557.60

Arias goes to Brussels: Costa Rican President Oscar Arias speaks to the European Parliament yesterday, urging its nations to get on board for the pending trade partnership with Central America.

Olivier Hoslet / EFE

| Previous Daily News
| Monday | Tuesday
| Wednesday | Thursday
| Friday

All the flags? Mauricio Suárez, left, José Picado, right, and Christopher Portuguez, above, make up the maintenance staff decorating the court building Tuesday in San José's Plaza de Justicia. Flags abound now that Costa Ricans are warming up for the Sept. 15 celebration that marks the country's 1821 independence from Spain.

Lindy Drew / Tico Times

Boy George, Juanes set to play in Costa Rica
Eighties pop legend Boy George and Latin sensation Juanes are scheduled to make stops in the Central Valley.
See More...
Power outages felt in Guanacaste province
Electricity outages continue to affect parts of Carrillo, a canton in Costa Rica's northwestern Guanacaste province. The towns of Nuevo Colón, Playa Hermosa, Playas del Coco, and Ocotal lost power between 8 a.m. and noon on Tuesday and yesterday as technicians from Coopeguanacaste, the province's electrical cooperative, replaced electrical lines.
See More...
Arias urges EU to sign on to Central America partnership
BRUSSELS – Costa Rican President Oscar Arias urged European countries yesterday to swiftly sign a pending trade partnership agreement with Central America and to pick up “leadership” in cooperation with his region.
Costa Rican ex-President Calderón corruption trial set for November
Costa Rica is set to watch another former president face the judges.
Costa Rica Was
Ancient Cultural Frontier

This new Tico Times column will provide insights and news on Costa Rica's fascinating ancient past. Archaeologist Michael J. Snarskis, Ph.D., has lived and worked in Costa Rica for more than 30 years

 

Boy George, Juanes set to play in Costa Rica
By Elizabeth Goodwin and Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net, aleff@ticotimes.net

Eighties pop legend Boy George and Latin sensation Juanes are scheduled to make stops in the Central Valley.

Boy George (real name is George Alan O'Dowd) will perform in San José on Sept. 20 as part of a Latin American tour of more than five countries, according to promotion company ESP Producciones.

The concert will take place at Club the City in the eastern neighborhood of Curridabat at 8:30 p.m. Ticket prices range from $65 to $93 and can be purchased at mundoticket.com. Boy George is scheduled to perform hits by his band Culture Club in Lima, Peru, the day before his appearance in San José.

Earlier this year he was refused a visa to enter the United States due to an ongoing court case in England.

Award-winning Colombian pop rock star Juanes is set to swoon a Costa Rican audience Oct. 2 at Alejandro Morera Soto Stadium in Alajuela, northwest of San José, pushing tracks from his fourth album “La vida es un ratico” (Life's Just a Sec), Universal Music Central America announced yesterday.

Juanes' La Vida World Tour started March 6 in New York and he has since played 35 dates in the United States, 21 in Spain and 18 in other European countries, plus one in Africa. The Latin American leg kicks off Sept. 19 in Venezuela, hitting seven locales in his neighboring South American nation.

The singer, dubbed one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people, has penned such hits as “A Dios le pido,” “ La camisa negra ” and “Me enamora.”

On Aug. 27, Juanes debuted as an actor on the Mexican television show Terminales, according to newswire EFE.

The La Vida show will mark the first Juanes concert in Costa Rica since his October 2005 Mi sangre tour.

Though no date was set, tickets will go on sale soon, according to concert promoter Evenpro's spokesman José Cañas.

Power outages felt in Guanacaste province
By Devon Magee
Special to The Tico Times | editorial@ticotimes.net

Electricity outages continue to affect parts of Carrillo, a canton in Costa Rica's northwestern Guanacaste province. The towns of Nuevo Colón, Playa Hermosa, Playas del Coco, and Ocotal lost power between 8 a.m. and noon on Tuesday and yesterday as technicians from Coopeguanacaste, the province's electrical cooperative, replaced electrical lines.

Groups began cutting electricity in July for four-hour periods, sometimes twice a week. The maintenance is being done in conjunction with the new electrical substation being built in Nuevo Colón, which is scheduled to begin operating in the middle of next year and will service Carrillo's growing beachfront communities.

The new lines will provide higher electric power transmission. Residents can expect more outages in the near future, although Coopeguanacaste has not yet announced an updated outage schedule.

Arias urges EU to sign on to
Central America partnership

BRUSSELS – Costa Rican President Oscar Arias urged European countries yesterday to swiftly sign a pending trade partnership agreement with Central America and to pick up “leadership” in cooperation with his region.

Speaking before the European Parliament, Arias said the agreement is crucial to Central America's future and that it will allow Europe “to benefit from economies that have grown twice” as fast as EU economies in recent years.

The president has said he's confident the blocs will reach an agreement by early next year.

However, he lamented Europe's “neglect” of his region.

“We never imagined that by entering a world a peace we'd also be entering in (a world) of neglect,” Arias said. “Yesterday we were peace allies, today we can be partners in development.”

-EFE
Costa Rican ex-President Calderón
corruption trial set for November

Costa Rica is set to watch another former president face the judges.

A high court said the trial will start Nov. 3 for the CCSS-Fischel case, in which top figures such as Rafael Calderón Jr., who during his 1990-1994 allegedly accepted payment for helping Finnish medical equipment firm sell goods worth $39.5 million to the national public health care system.

Calderón has already acknowledged he received $520,000 from Walter Reiche, then president of the pharmacy Fischel, which represents the Finnish firm in Costa Rica. But Calderón, a lawyer who is likely to run again for president with the Social Christian Unity Party, said the money was legitimate payment for legal services rendered.

The announcement follows the start Monday of preliminary hearings for ex-President Miguel Angel Rodríguez, suspected of involvement during his term from 1998 to 2002 in an alleged payoff between French cell phone company Alcatel and the national telecom monopoly the Costa Rican Electricity Institute
(see http://www.ticotimes.net/daily_paid/dailynewsarchive
/2008_09/090208.htm#story3
).

-Tico Times
Costa Rica Was Ancient Cultural Frontier

This new Tico Times column will provide insights and news on Costa Rica's fascinating ancient past. Archaeologist Michael J. Snarskis, Ph.D., has lived and worked in Costa Rica for more than 30 years. He founded and directed the first scientific archaeology program in the National Museum and trained the first generation of Costa Rican students there and as a professor at the University of Costa Rica. A graduate of Yale and Columbia universities, he has published 67 books and articles, including catalogues for acclaimed museum exhibitions in the United States and Europe.

Good Points: At left, a preform for a Clovis spear point; center, whole and fragmented bifacial finished Clovis points; at right, a fishtail fluted spear point, all from Finca Guardiria, near the Caribbean-slope town of Turrialba.
Michael Snarskis | Tico Times

Are you intrigued by old, enigmatic objects? Sometimes wonder about those unusual different-colored layers in road cuts? Found some pottery fragments in your garden that don't look like anything modern? You dig?

Well, whether you dig or not, this column will provide answers to a lot of these kinds of questions, elucidate Costa Rica's key role in the archaeology of the Americas, and highlight landmark discoveries in the country over the past 50 years. Your questions are welcome.

The First Costa Ricans

Given current archaeological evidence, the first people in Costa Rica were definitely present at least 10,000 to 11,000 years B.C. Two things are important here: 1) they left behind chipped stone artifacts – spear points, hide and wood scrapers, drills – that have been securely radiocarbon-dated (C-14) to those times in other parts of the Americas; and 2) they were already physiologically modern human beings (Homo sapiens), just like we are today.

There was no human evolution in the American continents prior to Homo sapiens; that biological evolution took place in Africa, Asia and Europe only. The consensus among modern scientific archaeologists is that the first small bands of hunters following the last ice-age big game (megafauna such as mastodons, mammoths and others) across the frozen Bering Strait from Asia found themselves in a hunter's paradise, where big meaty animals did not know or fear humans and thus made easy prey. Some other archaeologists believe that humans entered the Americas as early as 30,000 to 40,000 years ago. These early human hunters killed by trapping giant animals in swampy ground and killing them with spears.

About Spear Points: Clovis and Fishtail

A pervasive theme that I will be mentioning here and in most of my columns to come is the importance of Costa Rica as a dynamic, fluctuating frontier zone between two major spheres of pre-Columbian cultural influence: Mesoamerica (central Mexico through El Salvador) and northern South America, primarily Colombia. (For those who might be wondering, the Andean high civilizations such as the Inca and their predecessors had very little to do with Costa Rican indigenous cultures.)

Remarkably, this cultural frontier role is evident even in the first human artifacts found in Costa Rica, which, in 1975, I found in a recently plowed sugarcane field called Finca Guardiria, near the Caribbean-slope town of Turrialba.

With the first archaeology students I had hired at the National Museum, we were surface-collecting the chipped flint-like stone artifacts we observed, first staking out a two-by-two-meter grid for better spatial control of the uppermost terrace of the cane field. There were lots of interesting man-made flint chips and reworked tools, but imagine my surprise when the student archaeologists emptied their collected bags back in the National Museum: two Clovis (named after Clovis, New Mexico, where one of the first examples was found 80 years ago) and one fishtail fluted (a bifacial channel made on the base to aid firm hafting) spear points. Big news!

There had been no previous artifact evidence of a Paleo-Indian occupation in Costa Rica, except a lone Clovis point supposedly found in the early 20th century by Carl Harman, a Swedish archaeologist, in the northwestern Guanacaste province, site unknown. The students hadn't realized what they had picked up, but those points and several other kinds of Paleo-Indian chipped stone tools revealed to me the first solid evidence of a workshop and probably habitation site on a terrace overlooking the Reventazón River and perhaps a now-vanished lake. The early hunters would lie in wait for the giant mammals to arrive and drink and then ambush them. The source of the flint was found in large boulders washed out of an ancient limestone ridge and into a small stream right below the terrace.

I published this important discovery, first in Spanish in Vínculos, a professional journal I founded in the National Museum, and then in American Antiquity, the foremost U.S. archaeological journal. The Tico Times gave front-page coverage to the discovery (TT, Sept. 17, 1976), a tradition the paper has continued to the present.

But here is what I find fascinating: Clovis-type Paleo-Indian spear points are found from Central America north to Alaska, while contemporary fishtail spear points, so named for their shape, are known from Costa Rica all the way to Patagonia, the tip of South America. In Costa Rica, we now have recovered seven Clovis points and three fishtail points made by these first human inhabitants. But in Panama, seven fishtail points and only two Clovis points are documented. More than 10,000 years ago, Costa Rica's role as a major ancient cultural frontier was first recognized, and it continued from that time until the Spanish arrival in the early 1500s.

Interested? I certainly was, and in the following years this key cultural frontier aspect of ancient Costa Rica was substantiated time and time again.



Dr. Snarskis guides tours to Guayabo, an ancient city and ceremonial center near Turri-alba, and to all local museums. Direct queries to snarskis @racsa.co.cr or phone/fax 2235-8824. See his Web sites at www.archaeocostarica.com and www.arqueocostarica.net. Reserve tours at Costa Rica Outdoors Travel Division, www.info.costaricaoutdoors.com or call toll-free from North America at 1-800-8308-3394.

Costa Rica dentist, health, teeth whitening, crowns, dental implants, bleaching, crowns, permanent make-up
Tico Times, Costa Rica, travel guide, guidebook, beaches, rainforests, hotels, activities, restaurants
RETURN TO THE TOP OF PAGE

HOME | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISE | GUIDEBOOKS | BACK ISSUES | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US | ABOUT US | NEWSSTANDS | LINKS