
thumb|Mural of Tlālōcān, Tepantitla, Teotihuacan culture
thumb|Mural of Tlālōcān, Tepantitla, Teotihuacan culture
Tlālōcān (; "place of Tlāloc") is described in several Aztec codices as a paradise, ruled over by the rain deity Tlāloc and his consort Chalchiuhtlicue. It absorbed those who died through drowning or lightning, or as a consequence of diseases associated with the rain deity. Tlālōcān has also been recognized in certain wall paintings of the much earlier Teotihuacan culture. Among modern Nahua-speaking peoples of the Gulf Coast, Tlālōcān survives as an all-encompassing concept embracing the subterranean world and its denizens.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).