The cuel are Mapuche-built tumulus. The best known cuels are near the localities of Purén and Lumaco in Araucanía, south-central Chile. The first significant studies of the cuel were published by Tom Dillehay and José Saavedra in 2003 and 2007. [1] [2] The word cuel is a neologism formed from the mapudungun word kuel, meaning boundary marker ( Spanish: lindero) according to the 18th century dictionary of Andrés Febrés. [3]
The cuel are Mapuche-built tumulus. The best known cuels are near the localities of Purén and Lumaco in Araucanía, south-central Chile. The first significant studies of the cuel were published by Tom Dillehay and José Saavedra in 2003 and 2007. [1] [2] The word cuel is a neologism formed from the mapudungun word kuel, meaning boundary marker ( Spanish: lindero) according to the 18th century dictionary of Andrés Febrés. [3]