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I found Colossal, Impossible Geometry with Desert Drifter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

An incredible coincidence resulted in Desert Drifter and I standing atop a mysterious and gargantuan block of stone in the middle of a forest. This thing had many secrets, but one stands out above all else. The history of this block, truly is puzzling. Had I not seen it with my own two eyes, I might not have believed it was real.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Machu Picchu Unveiled: Why Hiram Bingham Didn’t “Discover” It

 

Machu Picchu is known as the “lost city” of the Incas, ultimately discovered by Western explorers. Contemporary research indicates locals knew its secrets all along.

Sep 14, 2024 • By Marina Urdapilleta, BA in History, Specialization in Cultural Heritage Management
 
 
machu picchu unveiled hiram bingham discover

 

An ancient Inca city, Machu Picchu evokes a sense of wonder and mystery, a lost place that needed to be rediscovered. Its abandonment during the Spanish conquest left it to fade into obscurity until 1911 when Hiram Bingham, a Yale researcher, brought it back into the global spotlight. This was not, however, a true discovery; local communities had long been aware of its existence. The truth behind Bingham’s work challenges traditional notions of discovery, highlighting the intertwined histories and cultural dynamics surrounding Machu Picchu’s history.

 

 

Machu Picchu, Symbol of the Inca Empire

Machu Picchu panoramic
Panoramic view of Machu Picchu, 2006. Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

Machu Picchu, an ancient Inca city likely constructed in the 15th century, stands today as the most iconic symbol of the Inca Empire, the largest pre-colonial empire in South America due to itsconquests of neighboring kingdoms. ​​Despite the absence of a written language, the Incas devised a sophisticated system of communication and record-keeping using cords adorned with knots, known asquipus, a method that is still not fully understood today. Their legacy encompasses extraordinary architectural and engineering accomplishments that still captivate historians and archaeologists. Constructed without the use of iron, steel, or wheels, Machu Picchu was undoubtedly a monumental architectural feat, involving the labor of thousands of people.

 

 

Situated atop a precipitous ridge between two mountains, in a region characterized by heavy rainfall and geological instability, Machu Picchu captivates visitors with both its breathtaking scenery and historical significance. It covers 80,540 acres of mountain slopes, peaks, and valleys, and at its heart lies the spectacular archaeological monument known as The Citadel, situated over 7,900 feet above sea level. While its exact purpose remains uncertain, historians and archaeologists suggest several potential explanations. One prevalent theory is that Machu Picchu served as a royal estate and retreat for the Inca emperor Pachacuti. Additionally, it may have functioned as a religious sanctuary, agricultural hub, and administrative center. The strategic location of Machu Picchu amidst the Andes Mountains suggests its significance as a cultural, religious, and political center for the Inca Empire.

 

Machu Picchu at Dawn
Machu Picchu at dawn, 2006. Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

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Arecent studyproposed a groundbreaking new theory regarding Machu Picchu’s location, attributing it to geological factors. Fault lines beneath the site facilitated stone construction by naturally breaking granite into manageable pieces, aiding in drainage and water management. This suggests the Incas deliberately selected the site based on their understanding of the region’s geology. Moreover, the presence of a Quechua term for significant fractures underscores the Inca’s profound understanding of geological formations within their mountain domain. Renowned as one of the seven wonders of the modern world, Machu Picchu not only captivates with its breathtaking beauty but also constitutes a remarkable collection of ruins possessing immense archaeological and historical significance that remains partially shrouded in mystery. Extensive research is required to unravel the many remaining questions surrounding Machu Picchu.

 

Searching for Vilcabamba

Sergeant Carrasco at Machu Picchu
Sergeant Carrasco with Machu Picchu’s Intihuatana, a sacred stone carving, during the Brigham expedition, 1911. Source: National Geographic Society

 

The most well-known story attributes the site’s discovery to Hiram Bingham, a Yale researcher who traveled to Peru in search of the last Inca capital. He began his adventure in 1911, accompanied by a geologist-geographer, a topographer, a naturalist, a surgeon, an engineer, and a young assistant. The trip began in Cuzco, where they started ascending the Urubamba River valley. The expedition reached a small plain bordered by gullies, where Melchor Arteaga, a tenant of those lands, resided. He informed them that in the opposite direction lay ruins that possibly matched what they were seeking, so he offered to guide them. After an exhausting journey, crossing the Urubamba River and ascending slopes under stifling heat, they arrived at a small hut where they were welcomed by the family living there. One of their sons volunteered to show Bingham the ruins. Just around the hill from their hosts’ dwelling, the explorer, astonished, saw hundred-stepped Inca terraces, about 330 yards long and 10 feet high. Bingham hurriedly took many photos with his Kodak A3 and wrote notes in his journals.

 

A year later, after securing much more funding from Yale University and the National Geographic Society, he returned to Machu Picchu with a much larger team of geologists, archaeologists, and surveyors to begin excavations with the help of indigenous people from the area.​​ Bingham faced criticism for illegally removing almost 50,000archaeological piecesthat were taken to Yale University. Only 300 were returned; the rest remain in large European museums, including the British Museum and the Louvre, or in private collections.

 

Melchor Arteaga crossing the Urubamba River
Melchor Arteaga crossing the Urubamba River on the journey to Machu Picchu, 1911. Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

With the dissemination of his research, notably featured in a dedicated issue ofNational Geographicin 1913 highlighting the history and recent discoveries, Hiram Bingham solidified his reputation as the individual who discovered Machu Picchu. Through publications, lectures, and media coverage, Bingham’s findings captured global attention, elevating Machu Picchu to iconic status and establishing its significance in archaeological and historical circles worldwide.

 

Despite his contributions to the discovery and initial exploration of Machu Picchu, Bingham’s approach and interpretations have been criticized by modern scholars. He was driven more by romanticized notions and preconceptions than by empirical evidence, leading to speculative theories and interpretations that often deviated from reality. Despite having a moon crater named after him and speculation that he influenced the character of Indiana Jones, Bingham is not highly regarded by contemporary academics. He was convinced that he had found the last city of the Incas, the legendary “lost city” of Vilcabamba la Vieja, the last bastion of the independent Inca rulers who waged a lengthy battle againstSpanish conquistadors. Ironically, Bingham had already visitedVilcabambabut decided it was too small to be so legendary, not as fancy as he had hoped. And so, he invented the new lost city and a whole story behind it. For example, during his explorations they found dozens of bodies buried there, leading Bingham to speculate that Machu Picchu was a temple devoted to the Virgins of the Sun, a holy order of chosen women dedicated to one ofthe Inca’s deities, the sun god Inti. However, his theory was quickly debunked as bodies of men were found in equal or greater measure.

 

The “Lost” City That Never Was

Photo taken during the first Bingham expedition to Machu Picchu in 1911; in the first window from left to right, there is a signature inscription that reads “A. Lizárraga 1902.” Source: Yale University Manuscripts & Archives Digital Images Database

 

A mountain of evidence attests to the fact that Hiram Bingham was not the first to reach the ruins. In the 16th century, there were references to the Machu Picchu site in the writings of Diego Rodríguez Figueroa, known then as Pijchu. Additionally, recent findings have turned up 19th-century maps in which Machu Picchu is accurately located. In the second half of the 19th century, German adventurer Augusto Berns established a mining company, which he used to plunder the relics of Machu Picchu and sell them for his benefit. There are even documents from 1867 that indicate that Berns had to deliver 10% of his looted gold to the Peruvian government.

 

In 1902, Agustín Lizárraga, a peasant employed by his landlords, embarked on a mission to explore new lands for agricultural expansion. Known for his skill in “climbing the most inaccessible places” and “challenging obstacles,” he was the ideal candidate for the task. Accompanied by his cousin, he journeyed through the rugged mountain terrain until they stumbled upon the awe-inspiring ruins of Machu Picchu. Overwhelmed by the sight, Lizárraga inscribed his name and the year on a stone, commemorating their discovery. Upon their return, Lizárraga’s landlords organized visits to the ruins, hoping to attract tourists and promote the site’s cultural significance. However when Bingham “discovered” the ruins nine years later, he ordered the inscription to be erased, citing conservation reasons. Although Bingham noted the inscription in his diary, he did not publicize its existence, choosing to remain silent on the matter.

 

machu picchu square 1911
Photo of the ruins at Machu Picchu when it was “discovered” in 1911. Source: National Geographic

 

Bingham, it turns out, was well aware that he hadn’t “discovered” anything—since he had the 19th-century maps, the resolution authorizing Berns’ presence at the historical site, and had even photographed Lizárraga’s inscription. Additionally, on his expedition he found three families cultivating crops, including potatoes, sugar cane, yucca, sweet potatoes, and corn on the terraces of Machu Picchu. The son of one of the peasant families, the Richartes, guided Bingham’s expeditions; he even mentioned in his diaries that if it hadn’t been for the boy, they would never have reached the ruins. It’s also clear that Bingham was aware of the proximity of the ruins to the region’s population; however, he made no effort to dispel his reputation as the great discoverer.

 

While Hiram Bingham’s efforts to investigate, excavate, and publicize the historical significance of Machu Picchu should be acknowledged, it remains essential to recognize that the site was never truly lost. Despite Bingham’s role in bringing Machu Picchu to the attention of the world, the site had always been known to locals in the area. His actions underscore a broader narrative often seen in historical exploration: the voices of distant explorers often overshadow the knowledge and heritage of indigenous communities. While Bingham’s efforts were instrumental in popularizing Machu Picchu globally, it’s crucial to recognize the enduring connection of indigenous communities to their heritage sites.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Machu Picchu Unveiled: Why Hiram Bingham Didn’t “Discover” It (thecollector.com)

 

 

 

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How Accurate Was the Ancient Indian Clock?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

There is a strange device in India called the Samrat Yantra, meaning the King of all Devices. This is not only the world’s Largest Sundial, but it is also the Most Accurate. And this is also the Most Photographed Monument of India. But why does it have secret chambers? How Advanced was Ancient Indian Science?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Peru's Great Urban Experiment

Features  May/June 2023

A millennium ago, the Chimú built a new way of life in the vast city of Chan Chan
 
 
Peru Chan Chan Aerial
An aerial view of Peru’s Moche Valley shows Chan Chan, a massive city constructed beginning in the early eleventh century A.D. by the rulers of the Kingdom of Chimor, leaders of a people known as the Chimú. Chan Chan sprawled across more than seven square miles and had a population of as many as 40,000. Its dense urban core contained nine separate walled palace enclosures, two of which are seen here.(OverFlight Stock)

The Moche River Valley in northern Peru was an unlikely place to build a city. Though barely 1,000 feet from the Pacific Ocean, the valley received less than a tenth of an inch of rain per year. Nevertheless, in about A.D. 1000, a people known as the Chimú selected a location in the valley some four miles north of the river and set about making it habitable. Called Chimor in colonial accounts, and now commonly known as Chan Chan, it became the largest urban center in the Americas.

 

Peru Chan Chan Map
 
(Ken Feisel)

What enabled the Chimú to build a city in this unpopulated coastal desert was their tremendous engineering skill, which they used to create an extensive network of irrigation canals that channeled snowmelt from the Andes Mountains into the Moche River. What drove the Chimú was the desire for a place to call their own. The valley had no one to conquer and evict, no existing structures to raze, and no troubled history to erase. “Chan Chan is an invented city in an artificially irrigated valley,” says archaeologist Gabriel Prieto of the University of Florida. “The Chimú transformed the landscape, created an entirely new society, and became the most powerful rulers in coastal Peru. Chan Chan was an experiment that worked for almost five hundred years.”

The Chimú built their new capital, which spread over more than seven square miles, in a way that distinguished them from other Andean cultures and was intended to reflect their particular social system. “There were enormous social differences and a clear recognition of social distinctions in Chimú society,” says archaeologist Jerry Moore of California State University, Dominguez Hills. “What is so important about Chan Chan is that it shows a very different kind of architectural style from other Andean societies.” Even their myths reveal how, for the Chimú, division between classes was at the center of their worldview. One myth says that royal and noble males were spawned from a gold egg, noblewomen from a silver egg, and everyone else from a copper egg. “I like the egg myth because it suggests that the Chimú understood that social and political inequality is ‘baked in’ to humanity from the beginning,” says anthropologist Robyn Cutright of Centre College.

 

Where the Coca Grows

 

Peru Moche Valley Collambay
Collambay, Moche Valley, Peru(Courtesy Alicia Boswell)

About 25 miles from Chan Chan in the foothills of the Andes on the easternmost edge of the Kingdom of Chimor sits ancient Collambay, a small village where excavations have unearthed some of the best evidence of how the Chimú interacted with the people they came to control. Collambay is in a small climatic zone called the chaupiyunga, an especially sunny area between the coastal valleys and the highlands that is the only place on the western slopes of the Andes suitable for growing coca, one of Andean peoples’ most precious crops. “Everyone needed access to coca for ritual, political, and social purposes,” says archaeologist Alicia Boswell of the University of California, Santa Barbara.

During excavations at Collambay, Boswell unearthed pottery assemblages that include a mix of styles—Chimú, highland, and locally made ceramics influenced by Chimú designs. She has also excavated graves in which highland burial practices were evident, but has found no Chimú-style burials. This, she says, suggests that the Chimú did not overwhelm those living in the region by force or by moving large numbers of Chimú people into town and forcing locals to emulate their traditions. Instead, they devised a different way to coexist and maintain a consistent supply of coca and other prestige goods, such as feathers from the Andean jungle and gold and silver ore from the highlands. “I haven’t found that all of a sudden everyone living in Collambay was Chimú,” says Boswell. “Instead, the Chimú worked with the local people, so everyone benefited. I think this is a great example of a contested landscape where people found a way to negotiate their relationship and control trade through the area. Perhaps, because they were so close to Chan Chan, these people were willing to cooperate and witnessed the growing power of the Chimú.”

 

Chan Chan, which was built up over about 450 years, was the largest adobe city in the world.(Alamy)

The first large-scale explorations of Chan Chan were conducted between 1968 and 1974 by members of the Chan Chan–Moche Valley Project, a massive mapping effort that investigated both the city’s monumental architecture and houses believed to have belonged to the urban working class. In the city plan that emerged, the researchers determined that Chimú kings lived in self-contained adobe royal palace complexes in a dense urban core of about two and half square miles. Each of the nine palaces had a single entrance that strictly controlled access to a zone of twisted, winding corridors leading to a royal residence with kitchens and wells, storerooms overflowing with the king’s treasure, and open plazas to hold feasts, ceremonies, and royal funerals. Many of the walls were covered with depictions of pelicans, fish, marine motifs, and Chimú deities. Seven palaces contained burial platforms intended for the deceased ruler.

The palaces were surrounded by walls up to 30 feet high. When a king died, his successor would build a new palace. “Each king or ruler constructed his own palace,” says Cutright. “There must have been some idea that succession required something new, not just inheriting the old.” Other members of the royal elite lived in smaller adobe compounds that included many of the same structures as the palaces, but on a much smaller scale. Chan Chan’s commoners, it was thought, lived and worked in small wattle-and-daub structures in four neighborhoods spread across the city. “The sharp social stratification of Chimú society is very clear in the architecture,” says Joanne Pillsbury, curator of ancient American art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. “There are extreme differences in the scale and quality of building materials and ornament.”\

 

Peru Chan Chan Palace Wall
Marine motifs, including fish, decorate many of the walls of Chan Chan’s palaces, a sign of the Chimú’s dependence on the sea to support the city’s huge population.(Adobestock)

For much of the last five decades, there has been little investigation of Chan Chan. “Chan Chan is greatly understudied considering its importance,” says Tulane University biological anthropologist John Verano. An exception has been ongoing excavations conducted by the Peruvian Ministry of Culture that began in 2006 and have focused on the palaces and especially the funerary platforms, or huacas. For the past several years, archaeologists have excavated the imposing Huaca Toledo on the east side of the city, which, sixteenth-century sources report, once contained an enormous treasure of gold and silver belonging to the Chimú king. During the recent excavations, the team discovered fine tapestries and decorated ceramics, evidence of important burials once placed in the platform.

In 2022, Prieto returned to Chan Chan to excavate the neighborhood on the southwest side of the city and reexamine how average residents had lived. “We thought we knew that these types of neighborhoods were inhabited by artisans and craft specialists—silversmiths, weavers, wood-carvers—from a low social class who worked full-time for the needs and desires of the Chimú kings and queens,” he says. “But archaeology changes all the time and there are new techniques and new things to learn.” Thus far, the discoveries Prieto and his team have made have begun to upend the traditional view of the neighborhoods and redefine who lived in Chan Chan. They have found that these areas were much more ethnically diverse than previously believed and, in some cases, the people much better off. The work has also suggested that some families in the neighborhoods may have filled a special role in Chimú society. Prieto believes that some of the children who were sacrificed during one of multiple mass sacrifice events that are known to have occurred in Chimú history were either born in or moved to Chan Chan before these ceremonies, which were crucial to how the Chimú envisioned the world and their place in it.

Peru Chimu Figurine Shield Cover Combo
Examples of Chimú metalwork include a silver and malachite figurine (left) of a panpipe player and a silver shield cover (right) decorated with marine animals, headdresses, birds, monkeys, and mythological creatures.(Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource, NY; The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Gift of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1969/Metropolitan Museum of Art)
A Chimú silver bottle in the form of a type of structure known from Chan Chan’s palaces.

 
(The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Gift of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1969/Metropolitan Museum of Art )

The Chimú were successors to the people of the Moche culture, whose rulers controlled much of northern Peru from about A.D. 200 to 900. According to the 1604 Anonymous History of Trujillo, written by a Spanish chronicler who recorded Chimú oral histories, the first Chimú king was Taycanamo, who came to the Moche Valley from the sea, having sailed there on a raft made of balsa logs, a design typical of the north. But the idea that the Chimú founder came from elsewhere may be more myth than reality. “The Chimú are the same people who have lived on the coast of Peru for as long as there have been people living there,” says Cutright. “There’s no evidence of any major population replacement, and instead we should think about shifts in political organization and cultural identity.” Once new generations started to call themselves Chimú, Prieto says, they tried to detach from the past and wipe the slate clean. “Chan Chan doesn’t emerge out of nowhere, but is distinctly and consciously different from Moche or anything else before,” says archaeologist Alicia Boswell of the University of California, Santa Barbara. “These people were reinventing how to express their novel ideologies and societal structures, and what we see, for example with the palaces, is a choice about how to present themselves as different and distinct from any culture before them.”

An embossed gold ear ornament depicting a Chimú lord carried on a litter wearing an elaborate feathered headdress

 
(Jan Mitchell and Sons Collection, Gift of Jan Mitchell, 1991/Metropolitan Museum of Art)

By the mid-fifteenth century, the Chimú territory, known as the Kingdom of Chimor, stretched about 600 miles along the coast from the Lambayeque Valley in the north to the Pativilca River in the south. Throughout the region, the Chimú used their irrigation expertise to maximize the production of cotton, maize, squash, lima beans, chili peppers, gourds, sweet potatoes, peanuts, avocados, and other fruits including guanabana or soursop, which, archaeological evidence indicates, seems to have been one of their favorite foods. They also ate llamas and guinea pigs and took great advantage of ample resources harvested from the sea. “I don’t think the Chimú could have survived without the sea and the marine riches available to them,” says Cutright.

The crops grown in the regions the Chimú took over were not new to the subjugated people, but the output required by their new rulers probably was. Much of these agricultural products fed and clothed the royal family and Chan Chan’s enormous population, which, in the mid-fifteenth century, reached upwards of 40,000. The city dominated the Moche Valley to such an extent that archaeologists have excavated only one Chimú rural settlement there. “It’s almost like the urban center of Chan Chan had a centripetal force drawing everyone to it,” says Moore.

Peru Chan Chan Feathers Combo
A variety of feathers (right) unearthed in House Eight in Chan Chan is evidence of the raw materials the Chimú used to create elaborate featherwork such as this ornament (left) worn by a sacrificed child recently excavated at the site of Pampa la Cruz.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

The Chimú were master craftspeople, and it is thought that perhaps as many as 12,000 artisans in the city at its height were engaged in craft production. The Chimú required large quantities of precious metals to fashion jewelry, vessels, and ceremonial weapons, some of which were decorated with mother-of-pearl and turquoise. In addition to raising their own macaws in Chan Chan, they imported macaw and tanager feathers from the Peruvian jungle to create vivid crowns and to decorate cotton and llama-wool textiles. “These finely made gold and silver vessels, glittering ornaments, and exquisite textiles were essential in the maintenance of political authority,” says Pillsbury. The Chimú also imported Spondylus shells—some of the best were from present-day Ecuador—prestige items that were carved into ornaments and beads and crushed to create a powder that was scattered in front of the king as he walked.

Peru Chan Chan Spondylus Combo
Spondylus shells such as these examples recently unearthed at House Seven were luxury items for the Chimú and precious offerings to the gods.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

Chimú rulers’ desire for wealth pushed them to expand their territory and form relationships in search of new sources of food, raw materials, human capital, and tribute from the people under their control. They established provincial administrative centers at sites including Farfán in the Jequetepeque Valley and Manchan in the Casma Valley. Unlike some ancient empires, though, not all Chimú expansion was achieved through military might. “Even if there are goods that you want, that are desirable, it doesn’t necessarily mean you have to have an entire militarized acquisition system to get them,” Moore says. “I don’t think those rare objects or materials were always obtained through conquest.” (See “Where the Coca Grows.”)

After nearly five centuries, in about 1450, Minchançaman, the eleventh and final ruler of the Kingdom of Chimor, was defeated by the Inca ruler Tupac Yupanqui and imprisoned in the Inca capital of Cuzco. Apart from brief mentions of the Chimú in the Anonymous History of Trujillo, almost nothing is known from any written source about the Chimú style of government or religious beliefs. By the time the Spanish arrived, their language, Quingnam, had almost completely disappeared and is now extinct. And archaeologists have focused their efforts in the region more on the Moche and Lambayeque, two of the peoples whose territories the Chimú controlled. “The Chimú are missing the party of prehistory,” says Prieto. “They haven’t been invited yet.”

 

Peru Chan Chan Tapestry Textile Combo 2
A recently excavated tapestry (left) made of camelid fibers found in House Eight and a painted cotton textile (right) that was part of a dress worn by a young woman sacrificed at Pampa la Cruz.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

When Prieto began his excavations, scholars believed that the city’s four residential neighborhoods had been filled exclusively with craft workshops, but little evidence of this had been found. Prieto says he was skeptical. Soon his team began to uncover evidence that the residents of the neighborhood they were working in held a higher socioeconomic position than that which artisans would be expected to have. Inside the two houses they have excavated thus far, they have unearthed luxury goods including macaw feathers, Spondylus shells, fine textiles, and metal objects. But Prieto has yet to unearth any solid evidence of sustained craft activity. “Based on the quantity and quality of the material we found in the residences, it’s very clear that these aren’t workshops,” he says. “These were by no means lower-class Chimú people and were definitely members of an intermediary elite not attached to royal families.” Although the team has found a great number of cotton items as well as spindles and needles in the houses, Prieto is uncertain whether the textiles were produced for household use or for the rest of the city as well.

In addition to the startling wealth Prieto’s team uncovered, he also found something else unanticipated. “I was expecting to find classic, simple Chimú wares used by people in the Moche Valley,” he says. Instead, he found ceramics from the Casma and Jequetepeque Valleys and from the Lambayeque region to the north, which may have been brought to Chan Chan by people who relocated to the city. “We knew the Chimú were conquering these regions,” Prieto says, “but we didn’t know they were incorporating people from these areas into the big city.” Macrobotanical evidence has also contributed to a new understanding of who was living in Chan Chan. The team has found remains of nonlocal foods such as quinoa, potatoes, and sauco, or elderberry, which are typical of the highlands. The textiles they have discovered also show an unexpected variety of weaving techniques and decoration. “We’re now thinking that the population in the city was much more diverse than previously thought,” says Prieto. “The way I see Chan Chan now is that it was full of people expressing their identity with different customs, different types of food, and different clothes.”

Peru Chan Chan Cotton Fragment Blue Tassel Combo
A fragment of cotton (left) decorated with fish and seabirds and a blue tassel (right) dyed with indigo found in House Eight.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

The houses Prieto and his team have excavated are directly across the street from each other, but have very different layouts, surprising for a society understood to be so dominated by those at the top. Each house measures between 850 and 1,000 square feet, but one, called House Eight, has a complex plan with more rooms, while the other, House Seven, is much simpler. “The houses aren’t cookie-cutter residences built in a certain way because the state tells you to,” Prieto says. “These people had liberty to build their homes as they wished.”

Peru Pampa la Cruz Miniature Vessels
Silver and copper alloy miniature vessels found at Pampa la Cruz date to between 1220 and 1300 and include beakers, metal bottles, ear ornaments, and parts of necklaces.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

Chan Chan grew in ways that did not adhere to a single overarching plan, but according to the changing needs of its residents. “Every time the Chimú expanded their territory and brought new people into the city, it had to accommodate more people, more ways of getting around.” Prieto says. “We see this in the archaeology even in just this one little neighborhood.” The team has found that the neighborhood’s history of occupation had at least three different phases and that modifications were made at each stage. “That leads me to think that whatever was going on at the domestic level was affected by major changes in the political organization,” says Prieto. “Maybe when they built a new palace, the ruler said that everyone had to change their own house, too.” Radiocarbon dates show that the last two levels of both houses date to after 1450, and possibly as late as 1470, well into the Inca period, after Chan Chan was thought to have been abandoned. “This is something that had never been known before,” says Prieto, “and we already have a much more complex understanding of the city than we ever thought possible.”

 

Peru Chan Chan Needle Spindle Combo
A copper alloy needle (top) and a wooden spindle (above) wrapped with fine cotton thread from House Eight.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

The power of Chan Chan’s rulers was not limited to the city’s palaces and neighborhoods. From 2011 to 2022, Prieto and Verano excavated the sites of Huanchaquito-Las Llamas, Pampa la Cruz, and El Pollo about six miles north of Chan Chan. They uncovered the remains of 451 sacrificed girls and boys ranging in age from five to 15, 36 sacrificed adults, most of whom were women, and 620 sacrificed llamas, all of which were juveniles. (See “A Society’s Sacrifice.”) Verano and other scholars have studied the children’s remains and learned that they all died in the same manner. “We see that they were sacrificed in a consistent way,” Verano says. “They weren’t bound or tied up like captives, they didn’t suffer any blows to the head, and most of the time we can identify a single horizontal cut through the sternum—a few do have hesitation cuts, perhaps made by someone less skilled—and likely the removal of their heart.” All the llamas were killed using the same process, a method that is still practiced in the Peruvian highlands today.

Peru Chan Chan House Seven
House Seven, a recently excavated property on the southwest side of Chan Chan, has a simple floor plan.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

The only historical mention of Chimú child sacrifice is an account by a Spanish friar, Father Antonio de la Calancha, who wrote that the Chimú conducted child sacrifices during lunar eclipses. No such descriptions of Chimú mass sacrifices exist in either the records of the Inca or other Spanish chroniclers. “Unlike the very well-documented high-altitude Inca child sacrifices, called the capacocha, we don’t have any ethnohistoric descriptions of these events or the motivations or procedures accompanying them,” says Verano. “Before our discovery, this phenomenon was invisible to archaeologists.” Furthermore, Chimú art does not include images of human sacrifice. “This is completely unlike their predecessors the Moche,” says Boswell, “whose iconography is filled with vivid scenes of male warrior sacrifice.” This change is further evidence of the break from the past the Chimú seemed intent upon. “We have no firsthand accounts of Chimú ritual practices, just the archaeological remains suggesting certain activities along with later accounts describing some practices,” says Pillsbury. “Sometimes works of art can help illuminate things. For example, Moche artists excelled in creating terrifying, snaggle-toothed beings, often engaged in cosmic struggle, but you don’t see those subjects often in Chimú art, and this suggests a change in belief and practices.”

 

Peru Chan Chan House Eight
House Eight, which is across the street from House Seven, has a more complex layout.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

At first, Prieto and Verano thought that the children were part of a single mass sacrifice at the various sites, perhaps connected to an El Niño weather event in 1450, but radiocarbon dates showed that there were, in fact, multiple sacrificial ceremonies beginning in about 1050 and continuing for the next 400 years at the three different locations, extending into the Inca period. “This was a series of ritual events performed as a way to communicate with the gods and mediate between people and supernatural forces,” says Verano. Ritual ceremonies of this level of standardization and complexity must, he says, have been organized at a state level and been tightly controlled by the kings at Chan Chan.

Peru Pampa la Cruz Burials
An aerial view of the most recent excavations at Pampa la Cruz shows the remains of both sacrificed adult women and children.(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)
A ceramic jar found in House Seven is the only complete jar found in Chan Chan’s residential sector. Graffiti on the vessel may indicate who owned it or what it contained.

 
(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

Prieto wanted to investigate where the children came from and what kinds of lives they led. A member of his team, bioarchaeologist Rachel Witt of Tulane University, conducted oxygen isotope analysis on the remains of 30 children from Pampa la Cruz and El Pollo to determine where they were born and grew up. Her work showed that 63 percent were not born in the Chimú imperial core in the Moche Valley. More than half of the children exhibit oxygen isotope values that fall outside the range of values for the water they would have drunk in the Moche Valley, suggesting that they were born outside the valley and lived there throughout infancy. “These children were drawn from many different communities, not only in the Moche Valley, but also from other valleys, and maybe even from farther inland than you would expect,” Witt says. “Perhaps this was done in tandem with Chimú imperial expansion to get everyone to buy into their worldview and the power of their empire, and they used coercive force to achieve that.”

Witt also examined a number of the children’s skulls from El Pollo and found that 52 percent had a type of cranial modification typical of locations across the north coast of Peru: a flattening of the back of the head that is a result of women carrying infants in cradleboards strapped to their backs. At least one of the children studied had a distinct form of cranial modification typical of the northern Andean highlands, which, says Witt, is rare to see in coastal communities. “The Chimú had the ability to draw on a large terrain, and I think they were reaching out to diverse regions to find children for the sacrifices,” says Verano. “Some may have been brought there specifically or they may have immigrated from the highlands and come to live near the capital. It reminds us to think of Chan Chan as a cosmopolitan city that controlled large parts of Peru.”

A wooden idol recently discovered at Pampa la Cruz represents a man holding a beaker in his left hand. The man’s enlarged earlobes indicate that he was a member of the Chimú elite.

 
(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto)

Prieto believes that some of the children may have grown up with their families in the neighborhood he is excavating or moved there from locations across the empire. “The child sacrifices were such an important part of Chimú society that it makes much more sense that they were raised in a fancy neighborhood in Chan Chan than in a little fishing village like Huanchaquito,” he says. The team also found that the sacrificed children showed no signs of malnutrition, enslavement, or captivity. “These families were not lower class,” Prieto says. “They had a good diet and good health, and this says something about who was living in these neighborhoods.

Despite their revered place in Chimú society, the children were not interred in a large temple or atop a platform hidden in a palace. Instead, they were laid to rest in the valley near the ocean, the Chimú’s legendary place of origin, at locations where many people could have watched the ceremony. Most of the children were buried facing northwest, toward the ocean, and the llamas were buried facing toward the mountains—an important way, Verano says, of marking the relationship between the land and the sea and Chan Chan. “The foundation myth of Chimú civilization is that they came from somewhere else,” says Prieto. “In Chan Chan, they wanted to start all over again and create a new dynasty, and the sacrificed children played a major role in this. I think the sacrifices created new kinds of bonds within their families without any kind of political baggage rather than claiming connections to old ancestors. In carrying out the sacrifices, and by bringing them into these new spaces, they transformed this arid landscape into a green expanse that would provide for them. By sacrificing the children and burying them, they were, in a way, planting new ancestors.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Features - Peru's Great Urban Experiment - Archaeology Magazine - May/June 2023

 

 

 

 

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Exploring Lost Ancient Settlement & Vast Looting in Peru

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I found an ancient unlabeled and unregistered settlement on a valley ridge in the desert in southern Peru using google earth. So I went there and was shocked to find that for almost 8 full kilometers, looting pits stretched along these ridges, so I had to check them out. Join me as I hike to these locations to capture what has been left behind and document these pieces of our ancient history.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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