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==Name== [[File:Lake Titicaca ESA22522896.jpeg|thumb|left|View from [[Sentinel-2]] satellite in 2020]] Given the various [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Indigenous]] groups that occupied the Lake Titicaca region, it likely lacked a single, commonly accepted name in prehistoric times and at the time the Spaniards arrived.<ref name="Standish2003a">Standish, C. (2005) ''Ancient Titicaca: The Evolution of Complex Society in Southern Peru and Northern Bolivia.'' Oakland, California, University of California Press. 338 pp. {{ISBN|978-0520232457}}</ref> The terms ''titi'' and ''caca'' can be translated in several ways. In [[Aymara language|Aymara]], ''titi'' can be translated as either [[cougar|puma]], [[lead]], or a heavy metal. The word ''caca'' (''kaka'') can be translated as white or grey hairs of the head and the term ''k’ak’a'' can be translated as either crack or fissure, or alternatively, comb of a bird.<ref name="Standish2003a" /> According to [[Weston La Barre]], the Aymara considered in 1948 that the proper name of the lake is ''titiq’aq’a,'' which means gray, discolored, lead-colored puma. This phrase refers to the sacred carved rock found on the [[Isla del Sol]].<ref name="La Barre1948a">La Barre, W. (1948) ''The Aymara Indians of the Lake Titicaca Plateau, Bolivia.'' American Anthropological Association Memoir. no. 68, pp. 208–210.</ref> In addition to names including the term ''titi'' and/or ''caca,'' Lake Titicaca was also known as ''Chuquivitu'' in the 16th century. This name can be loosely translated as lance point. This name survives in modern usage in which the large lake is occasionally referred to as ''Lago Chucuito.''<ref name="Standish2003a" /> [[File:Hombre Aymara y Lago Titicaca.jpg|thumb|An [[Aymara people|Aimara]] man next to a [[reed boat]] on Lake Titicaca]] Stanish argues that the logical explanation for the origin of the name Titicaca is a corruption of the term ''thakhsi cala,'' which is the 15th- to the 16th-century name of the sacred rock on the Isla del Sol.<ref name="BauerOthers2001a">Bauer, B., and Stanish, C. (2001) ''Ritual and Pilgrimage in the Ancient Andes.'' Austin, Texas, University of Texas Press. 314 pp. {{ISBN|978-0292708907}}</ref> Given the lack of a common name for Lake Titicaca in the 16th century, the Spaniards are thought to have used the name of the site of the most important indigenous shrine in the region, ''thakhsi cala'' on the Isla del Sol, as the name for the lake. In time and with usage, this name developed into ''Titicaca.''<ref name="Standish2003a" /> Locally, the lake goes by several names. The southeast quarter of the lake is separate from the main body (connected only by the [[Strait of Tiquina]]) and the Bolivians call it Lago Huiñaymarca (also Wiñay Marka, which in Aymara means the Eternal City) and the larger part Lago Chucuito. The large lake also is occasionally referred to as Lago Mayor, and the small lake as Lago Menor.<ref name="Standish2003a" /> In Peru, these smaller and larger parts are referred to as Lago Pequeño and Lago Grande, respectively.<ref name="Dejoux" />
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