Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires

The study of stones and rubble in a small section of the already totally artificial coast of the city of Buenos Aires, showed the presence of two recently arrived and very worn stones. Due to its reddish coloration, its geological composition and the evidence of manual carving, it was assumed that i...

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Autor principal: Schávelzon, Daniel
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios sobre Cultura y Sociedad 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/ihs/article/view/19198
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spelling I10-R340-article-191982019-10-18T19:21:29Z Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires Piedras viajeras. De las misiones a Buenos Aires Schávelzon, Daniel Jesuit Missions Misiones carved stones Misiones Jesuíticas Misiones piedras talladas The study of stones and rubble in a small section of the already totally artificial coast of the city of Buenos Aires, showed the presence of two recently arrived and very worn stones. Due to its reddish coloration, its geological composition and the evidence of manual carving, it was assumed that it came from the Misiones area and that it must have been part of buildings. We do not know where they come from, how that enor-mous trip was made in distance and in centuries, but they arrived recently and stayed over de muddy coast. Finally it is just a curiosity, there must be hundreds of Jesuit buildings destroyed in time and whose stones fell into the water; these two, curiously, were visible at a great distance, and shortly before leaving the ocean and lost forever. El estudio de las piedras y escombro de una pequeña sección de la costa ya totalmente artificial de la ciudad de Buenos Aires, mostró la presencia de dos piedras recién llegadas y muy desgastadas. Por su coloración rojiza, su composición geológica y con la evidencia de tallado manual era de suponer que provenían de la zona de Misiones y que debieron formar parte de uno o dos edificios. Desconocemos de dónde vienen, cómo se hizo ese viaje enorme en distancia y en siglos, pero llegaron en fecha reciente y quedaron sobre la tierra de la costa. Finalmente es solo una curiosidad, deben ser cientos los edificios jesuíticos destruidos en el tiempo y cuyas piedras cayeron al agua; estas dos curiosamente quedaron a la vista a una enorme distancia, y poco antes de salir al océano y perderse para siempre. Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios sobre Cultura y Sociedad 2018-01-22 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/ihs/article/view/19198 10.31057/2314.3908.v6.n1.19198 Antiguos jesuitas en Iberoamérica; Vol. 6 Núm. 1 (2018): Enero / Junio de 2018; 119-127 2314-3908 10.31057/2314.3908.v6.n1 spa https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/ihs/article/view/19198/19137
institution Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
institution_str I-10
repository_str R-340
container_title_str Antiguos jesuitas en Iberoamérica
language Español
format Artículo revista
topic Jesuit Missions
Misiones
carved stones
Misiones Jesuíticas
Misiones
piedras talladas
spellingShingle Jesuit Missions
Misiones
carved stones
Misiones Jesuíticas
Misiones
piedras talladas
Schávelzon, Daniel
Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires
topic_facet Jesuit Missions
Misiones
carved stones
Misiones Jesuíticas
Misiones
piedras talladas
author Schávelzon, Daniel
author_facet Schávelzon, Daniel
author_sort Schávelzon, Daniel
title Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires
title_short Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires
title_full Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires
title_fullStr Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires
title_full_unstemmed Rolling stones. From the jessuit missions to Buenos Aires
title_sort rolling stones. from the jessuit missions to buenos aires
description The study of stones and rubble in a small section of the already totally artificial coast of the city of Buenos Aires, showed the presence of two recently arrived and very worn stones. Due to its reddish coloration, its geological composition and the evidence of manual carving, it was assumed that it came from the Misiones area and that it must have been part of buildings. We do not know where they come from, how that enor-mous trip was made in distance and in centuries, but they arrived recently and stayed over de muddy coast. Finally it is just a curiosity, there must be hundreds of Jesuit buildings destroyed in time and whose stones fell into the water; these two, curiously, were visible at a great distance, and shortly before leaving the ocean and lost forever.
publisher Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios sobre Cultura y Sociedad
publishDate 2018
url https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/ihs/article/view/19198
work_keys_str_mv AT schavelzondaniel rollingstonesfromthejessuitmissionstobuenosaires
AT schavelzondaniel piedrasviajerasdelasmisionesabuenosaires
first_indexed 2024-09-03T21:22:39Z
last_indexed 2024-09-03T21:22:39Z
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