tataca (FCbk11f215v)
This iconographic example, featuring the verb to excavate (tataca), is included in this digital collection for the purpose of making comparisons with related hieroglyphs. The term selected for this example comes from the text near the image in the Digital Florentine Codex. There is no gloss, per se. This example shows a Nahua man excavating a cave to extract lead (temetztli) ore. A simplex hieroglyph in the cave, showing a moon (metztli), stands for temetztli, its near homophone and associated with the color and/or shine of lead. The moon consists of the face of a man in profile, looking toward the right. The cave (oztotl) is drawn here more like a landscape sketch than a hieroglyph, and the surrounding hill or mountain (tepetl) is not drawn much like a hieroglyph, either.
Stephanie Wood
The contextualizing image shows another glyph for temetztli in the lower left of the scene about excavating and working minerals. The one in the lower left is a more complete, three-element compound hieroglyph than the one in the cave. See below for examples of hieroglyphic caves and mountains.
Stephanie Wood
tataca
Stephanie Wood
1577
Jeff Haskett-Wood
excavación, mineral, minerales, cerros, montañas
tataca, to dig in the earth, excavate, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/tataca
escavar plomo
Stephanie Wood
Available at Digital Florentine Codex/Códice Florentino Digital, edited by Kim N. Richter and Alicia Maria Houtrouw, "Book 11: Earthly Things", fol. 215v, Getty Research Institute, 2023. https://florentinecodex.getty.edu/en/book/11/folio/215v/images/0 Accessed 16 November 2025.
Images of the digitized Florentine Codex are made available under the following Creative Commons license: CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International). For print-publication quality photos, please contact the Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana ([email protected]). The Library of Congress has also published this manuscript, using the images of the World Digital Library copy. “The Library of Congress is unaware of any copyright or other restrictions in the World Digital Library Collection. Absent any such restrictions, these materials are free to use and reuse.”

