Cerro Tláloc
Mountain and archaeological site in Ixtapaluca and Texcoco, Mexico / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Cerro Tláloc (sometimes wrongly listed as Cerro el Mirador; Nahuatl: Tlalocatépetl) is a mountain and archaeological site in central Mexico. It is located in the State of Mexico, in the municipalities of Ixtapaluca and Texcoco, close to the state border with Puebla.[2] Formerly an active volcano, it has an elevation of 4,158 metres (13,642 ft), thus being the ninth highest mountain of Mexico.
Cerro Tláloc | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Elevation | 4,158 m (13,642 ft)[1] |
Prominence | 968 m (3,176 ft) |
Isolation | 22.65 km (14.07 mi) |
Listing | 9th highest major summit of Mexico 88th highest major summit of North America |
Coordinates | 19°24.44′N 98°42.45′W |
Geography | |
Location | Ixtapaluca and Texcoco municipalities, State of Mexico, Mexico |
Geology | |
Age of rock | Plio-Pleistocene |
Mountain type | Stratovolcano |
Volcanic arc/belt | Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt |
Climbing | |
Easiest route | hike |
The mountain was considered by the Nahuan peoples, foremost among them the Aztecs, to be specially sacred to the raingod Tláloc. In fact, the mountain was believed to be one of his primary earthly dwelling places, called Tlālōcān. Attribution of this and other mountains to the sacred presence of rain deities predates the Aztec era by centuries, even millennia. At the summit there are still remains of a shrine where high ceremonies would have been carried out. The rites of Tláloc were otherwise performed at his temples, most famously that occupying one half of the Templo Mayor at the heart of the temple precinct of nearby Mexico-Tenochtitlan. The inherent analogy of temple pyramids to sacred mountains allows for the very likely possibility that the central temple of the Aztec capital, as such, was at least partly a symbolic representation of the actual Cerro Tláloc, and that the summit shrine of the temple was itself an analogue to that atop the mountain. The shrine atop is one of the highest-elevation shrines in the world.
Together with Mount Telapón (4,060 metres (13,320 ft)) and some other, lower peaks, Cerro Tláloc forms the "Sierra de Río Frío", the northernmost tip of the Sierra Nevada. The mountain is easily accessible from Federal Highway 150 at the town of Río Frío de Juárez. The long, but easy and non-technical hike provides an elevation gain of over 1200 m.[3] More strenuous routes depart from San Pablo Ixayoc[4] and from other towns outside Texcoco.