Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Caballito_de_totora> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 45 of
45
with 100 triples per page.
- Caballito_de_totora abstract "Caballitos de totora are reed watercrafts used by Peruvian fishermen for the past 3,000 years, archaeologically evidenced from pottery shards.Named for the way they are ridden, straddled ('little reed horses' in English), fishermen use them to transport their nets and collect fish in their inner cavity. The name is not the original name as horses were not introduced to South American until after the Spanish arrived in the 15th Century. They are made from the same reed, Scirpus californicus, used by the Uros in the Lake Titicaca region.Fishermen in the port town of Huanchaco famously, but in many other locations practically, still use these vessels to this day, riding the waves back into shore, and suggesting some of the first forms of wave riding. There is currently a minor debate in the surfing world as to whether or not this constitutes the first form of surfing.".
- Caballito_de_totora thumbnail Vasija_chimú_caballito_de_totora_(M._América_10788)_01.jpg?width=300.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageID "22742639".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageLength "2921".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageRevisionID "697365551".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Caballito_de_totora.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Category:Indigenous_topics_of_the_Andes.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Category:Water_transport_in_Peru.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Chimú_culture.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Ecology.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Huanchaco.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Titicaca.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Lands_inhabited_by_indigenous_peoples.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Moche_culture.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Peru.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink caballitos-de-totora-by-roberto-arguello-for-syndicatednews-net.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Schoenoplectus_californicus.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Surfing.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Trujillo,_Peru.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink Uru_people.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink File:Huanchaco.jpg.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink File:HumedalesHuanchaco1.JPG.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLink File:Vasija_chimú_caballito_de_totora_(M._América_10788)_01.jpg.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLinkText "Caballito de totora".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLinkText "caballito de totora".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLinkText "horses of totora".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageWikiLinkText "reed horse".
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Caballito_de_totora wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Caballito_de_totora subject Category:Indigenous_topics_of_the_Andes.
- Caballito_de_totora subject Category:Water_transport_in_Peru.
- Caballito_de_totora hypernym Watercrafts.
- Caballito_de_totora type People.
- Caballito_de_totora comment "Caballitos de totora are reed watercrafts used by Peruvian fishermen for the past 3,000 years, archaeologically evidenced from pottery shards.Named for the way they are ridden, straddled ('little reed horses' in English), fishermen use them to transport their nets and collect fish in their inner cavity. The name is not the original name as horses were not introduced to South American until after the Spanish arrived in the 15th Century.".
- Caballito_de_totora label "Caballito de totora".
- Caballito_de_totora sameAs Q848430.
- Caballito_de_totora sameAs Caballito_de_Totora.
- Caballito_de_totora sameAs Caballito_de_totora.
- Caballito_de_totora sameAs m.05zt0cr.
- Caballito_de_totora sameAs Totora.
- Caballito_de_totora sameAs Q848430.
- Caballito_de_totora wasDerivedFrom Caballito_de_totora?oldid=697365551.
- Caballito_de_totora depiction Vasija_chimú_caballito_de_totora_(M._América_10788)_01.jpg.
- Caballito_de_totora isPrimaryTopicOf Caballito_de_totora.