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The Aztecs used difficult materials with surprising artfulness and detail in their sculpture. Stone and wood were fashioned with stone tools that were often made from obsidian, a volcanic glass. Metalworking was confined to copper and gold, which were either shaped by hammering when cold, or melted and cast in clay moulds.
The Aztecs used a complex calendar that combined a sacred period of 260 days with the solar year of 365 days. When the two calendars coincided, which happened every 52 years, great rites to pacify the gods were performed, including mass human sacrifice and the rebuilding of temples. The Aztecs had numerous gods, but their most important were Huitzilopochtli (hummingbird wizard) and the feathered serpent Quetzalcoatl. Aztec writing combined hieroglyphs and pictographs. Despite the destruction of Aztec society and culture, some forms of the original Aztec language Nahuatl are still spoken by some Mexicans.
Blue stands for the Pacific Ocean. The yellow stripe represents the Equator. The points of the star symbolize the island's 12 original tribes. Effective date: 31 January 1968.
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