Thursday, December 15, 2011

Marcahuamachuco - city of the dead, a fascinating site in the northern Peru

Site Significance
During the Andean Early Middle Horizon
(300–700A.D.) a regional highland state starts
emerging, having as one of its main principal
locations the extended monumental site of
Marcahuamachuco in the northern highlands
of Peru. Archaeological evidence shows
increased articulation of Huamachuco culture
to the neighboring northern (Cajamarca) and
southern highlands (Conchucos and Callejón
de Huaylas), and to some extent to the Pacific
Coast (with the Moche tradition).
During the later Middle (700-900 A.D.) and into
the Intermediate Late Horizons (until around
1200 A.D.), archaeological evidence suggests
that the walls were used for human burials
contributing to the ceremonial functions of the
site. Marcahuamachuco became a prominent
center at the same time that the Wari culture
in southern Peru flourished (400–1100 A.D.).
Abandonment of Marcahuamachuco was
possibly in the 15th century.


Built on top of an isolated plateau 5 kilometers
long and 500 meters wide with a vast view of
its surroundings, Marcahuamachuco contains
several major compounds surrounded by
curved stone walls as high as 12 meters,
with inner galleries, rooms and plazas which
suggest administrative and ceremonial
functions.
There is an urgent need to systematically
retrieve, digitize and organize information
from past publications and graphic material,
a good deal of which is not available in Peru.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Moray - identified as a Buddhist 'Tricakra ' not only is the fascinating archeological site.....


Moray is a site located near Cusco, Peru at 3500 meters above sea level (11,500 feet). At first glance it seems to be a kind of an amphitheater, formed of 24 circular platforms, and it is an amphiteatr which has the name of 'tricakra' in Sanskrit, the ancient language of India. The site contains unusual pre-Inca ruins, mostly consisting of several enormous terraced circular depressions, the largest of which is about 30 m (98 ft.) deep; their depth and orientation with respect to wind and sun creates a temperature difference of as much as 15 °C (27 °F) between the top and bottom level.

Tricakra refers to the “three cricles” containing the twenty-four rows of seats designed to be used by twenty-four “sacred girls” (ḍākinīs), according to the 9th-centruy Vajraḍākatantra; list of names of such Ḍākinīs and of their internal seats is given as well as their husbands' names who are called by the text heroes (vīra). Such twenty-four rows of seats form three circles (tricakra) i.e.:— ‘the cicle of mind’ (cittacakra), ‘the circle of word’ (vākcakra), ‘the circle of body’ (kāyacakra). The symbol which represents tricakra is called triskelion and it comes from the art represented by the LlolLeo or Aconcagua cultures from the Central Chile. A triskelion is an element of the banner of the Isle of Man,which was known to Romans; an interesting story is connected to it because speaking of the island, Julius Caesar in his Commentaries says:" In the mid sea between Britannia and Hibernia is an island called Mona." According to the wisdomlib.com 'mona' (nt.) means wisdom; self-possession; silence in the Pali language. Moray was thought to be an Incan agricultural 'research center' where experiments of crops at different heights were carried out, and thus creating different types of microclimates, and possibly it was used as such during last 500 + years. It may have served as a model for the calculation of the agricultural production This large temperature difference was possibly used to study the effects of different climatic conditions on crops; it also has a sophisticated irrigation system.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Thirty-seven pre-Inca burial sites discovered in the southern Peru

Thirty-seven pre-Inca tombs,
which date back to between 800 and 1445 AD, were accidentally discovered last week while workers were digging trenches as part of the installation of a water system for the Boca del Río settlement, 60 kilometers from the city of Tacna in southern Peru.

Archaeologist Gladys Barreto, who was hired by the Boca del Río consortium to be in charge of executing the construction, said that half of the found tombs contain the remains of children. Also discovered were cerami

cs, symbolic depictions of boats, wooden harpoons and copper hooks.

... Barreto believes that the remains are from the period known as the Late Regional Development and are evidence for the exchange between the cultures on the coast and those in the Andean valleys in the Tacna sierra.

She explained that the progression of this culture happened in parallel with similar developments going on in the Tambo and Arequipa valley, as well as regions in northern Chile.

Jesús Gordillo, archaeologist who studies Tacna cultures, says of the society’s development: “We are talking about advanced cultures, whose principal economic activity would have been fishing.” He stressed that these remains, along with those found further north in Tomoyo, as well as other regions including the Sama valley, Vituña, the beaches Cánepa and Meca, Ite and Punta Picata shown that the Tacna coast was densely populated during that era. (adopted from Living in Peru)