The principal attraction of this small and select museum is its valuable collection of pottery from the different cultures of the area’s indigenous peoples.
Covarrubias esquina Antofagasta, Ovalle, Chile.
Tues-Fri 10am-6pm, Sat, Sun & holidays 10am-2pm
Free
Anthropomorphic Jar.
The Limarí Museum in Ovalle, the capital of the Limarí Province of central-northern Chile’s Coquimbo Region, was founded in 1963 as the Ovalle Archaeological Society Museum. It was created principally to house pieces found by the Society’s members in nearby excavations as well as an important collection of objects donated by prominent local doctor and archaeologist Guillermo Durruty.
Over the next few years, the Museum’s collections expanded considerably, thanks mainly to excavations carried out jointly with the La Serena Archaeological Museum. In 1996, the Museum moved to Ovalle’s former train station where the town’s public library is also housed.
The station, which dates back to the 1930s, fell into disuse after train services to the town were ended in the early 1980s and was abandoned until its restoration as part of a broader municipal plan in the mid-1990s.
Today, the Museum's collection comprises over 700 archaeological pieces that are displayed in five rooms:
Of particular interest are pieces from a Diaguita cemetery discovered when work began in the 1960s to build a sports stadium for Ovalle. The extent and wealth of this site were key in prompting the decision to found the Museum.
Objects from it include a packcha (anthropomorphic ritual vessel), a cushuna (zoomorphic vessel) and the "snake" (an ophidiomorphic figure).