[Anahuac by Edward Burnett Tylor]@TWC D-Link book
Anahuac

CHAPTER VI
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While the Tlascalans were at war with the Aztecs, they had to do without salt for many years, as it was not produced in their district.

Humboldt thinks that the chile which the Indians consume in such quantities acts as a substitute.

It is to be remembered that the soil is impregnated with both salt and natron in many of these upland districts, and the inhabitants may have eaten earth containing these ingredients, as they do for the same purpose in several places in the Old World.
We disembarked after sailing to the end of these great evaporating pans, and found horses waiting to take us to the Bosque del Contador.
This is a grand square, looking towards the cardinal points, and composed of ahuehuetes, grand old deciduous cypresses, many of them forty feet round, and older than the discovery of America.

My companion, not content with buying collections at secondhand, wished to have some excavations made on his own account, and very judiciously fixed on this spot, where, though there were no buildings standing, the appearance of the ground and the mounds in the neighbourhood, together with the historical notoriety of the place, made it probable that something would be found to repay a diligent search.

This expectation was fully realized, and some fine idols of hard stone were found, with an infinitude of pottery and small objects.
When I look through my notes about Tezcuco, I do not find much more to mention, except that a favourite dish here consists of flies' eggs fried.


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