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5,500-year-old settlement found near Nazca, in Peru

5,500-year-old settlement found near Nazca, in Peru

Archaeo News
Stone Pages

A team of Peruvian and German archaeologists has discovered the remains of a human settlement 5,500 years old near the southern town of Nazca, south of Lima. The archaeologists, who are members of the Nazca-Palpa project, said that the discovery was made in a sector known as Pernil Alto, some 15 kilometers (9 miles) from Palpa.

The project is headed by Peruvian archaeologists Johny Isla Cuadrado and Elsa Tomasto, and by Germany’s Markus Reindel. The find consists of a group of homes in which 19 graves were found, including the remains of a child younger than 1 year old with possible evidence of having been mummified. The find is the first discovery in southern Peru of an inhabited site corresponding to the late portion of the archaic period some 3,500 BCE.

One of the project researchers said that the excavations made at the site since last October enabled the team to find the remains of eight small oval-shaped and circular homes made by digging deep pits in the ground. Also found were up to 19 graves of children and adults interred individually inside the homes, which would seem to indicate that they were buried there after the homes were abandoned. In some of the graves, archaeologists found carved bones and snail-shells, deer horns, necklaces and bracelets made from shells, but there was no concrete evidence of offerings to the dead or to dieties.

The researchers are seeking to expand their knowledge about the culture of southern Peru in the early epochs from about 5,500 years ago up to the Inca civilization in the 16th century.

Source: Latin American Herald Tribune (24 November 2008)

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Archaeologists celebrate another Peru find

26 October 2008
Archaeo news

Stone Pages

Peruvian archaeologists have made the most exciting find in the country for a generation. They have confirmed the discovery of two 3,000-year-old temples in the Collud-Zarpan complex, some 500 miles north of the capital Lima. The two structures formed part of a large ceremonial area that belonged to the Cupisnique culture, according to Peruvian archaeologist Walter Alva.

He said: “We have here a monumental staircase of 25m in width. The rest is a polychromatic relief with images of the spider god, and we also have a part behind of what would be a temple that extended at least 500m south.”

The archaeologist said the discovery ranks as one of Peru’s most important religious finds and could reveal important information about the influence of Cupisnique culture. The news comes as government officials considering giving some £350,000 worth of funding to reopen excavation at the site, which closed down last year due to lack of money.

Source: ITN (21 October 2008)

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Ancient Peru Pyramid Spotted by Satellite

Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News

Oct. 3, 2008 — A new remote sensing technology has peeled away layers of mud and rock near Peru’s Cahuachi desert to reveal an ancient adobe pyramid, Italian researchers announced on Friday at a satellite imagery conference in Rome.

Nicola Masini and Rosa Lasaponara of Italy’s National Research Council (CNR) discovered the pyramid by analyzing images from the satellite Quickbird, which they used to penetrate the Peruvian soil.

The researchers investigated a test area along the river Nazca. Covered by plants and grass, it was about a mile away from Cahuachi’s archaeological site, which contains the remains of what is believed to be the world’s biggest mud city.

Via Quickbird, Masini and colleagues collected hi-resolution infrared and multispectral images. After the researchers optimized the images with special algorithms, the result was a detailed visualization of a pyramid extending over a 9,000-square-mile area.

The discovery doesn’t come as a surprise to archaeologists, since some 40 mounds at Cahuachi are believed to contain the remains of important structures.

“We know that many buildings are still buried under Cahuachi’s sands, but until now, it was almost impossible to exactly locate them and detect their shape from an aerial view,” Masini told Discovery News. “The biggest problem was the very low contrast between adobe, which is sun-dried earth, and the background subsoil.”

Cahuachi is the best-known site of the Nazca civilization, which flourished in Peru between the first century B.C. and the fifth century A.D. and slid into oblivion by the time the Inca Empire rose to dominate the Andes.

Famous for carving in the Peruvian desert hundreds of geometric lines and images of animals and birds that are best viewed from the air, the Nazca people built Cahuachi as a ceremonial center, molding pyramids, temples and plazas from the desert itself.

There, priests led ceremonies including human sacrifices, drawing people from across the region.

Between 300 and 350 A.D., two natural disasters — a powerful flood and a devastating earthquake — hit Cahuachi. The site lost its sacred power to the Nazca, who then abandoned the area.

But before leaving, they sealed all monuments and buried them under the desert sand.

“Up to now, we have completely unearthed and restored a huge asymmetrical pyramid, known as the Grand Pyramid. A terraced temple and a smaller pyramid are in an advanced state of excavation,” Giuseppe Orefici, an archaeologist who has spent decades excavating Cahuachi and has also worked with the CNR researchers, wrote in the conference paper.

Featuring a 300-by-328-foot base, the newly discovered pyramid consists of at least “four degrading terraces which suggest a truncated pyramid similar to the Grand Pyramid.” With seven levels, this imposing monument was sculpted from the landscape and enhanced by large adobe walls.

“This is an interesting finding. As with the Grand Pyramid, it is likely that also this pyramid contains the remains of human sacrifices,” Andrea Drusini, an anthropologist at Padova University, told Discovery News.

In previous excavations at Cahuachi, Drusini found some 20 severed “offering heads” at various locations inside the Grand Pyramid.

“They have circular holes cut into the forehead and were perfectly prepared from an anatomical point of view,” Drusini said.

The researchers are now investigating other buried structures next to the newly discovered pyramid.

“This innovative technology opens up new perspectives for the detection of buried adobe monuments in Cahuachi and elsewhere,” said Masini. “Once we have more information about the size and shape of the structures, we might turn to virtual archaeology to bring the pyramid and its nearby structures back to life.”

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Peru joins battle over $500 million booty

Spain alleges treasure was looted from sunken Spanish warship

MSNBC

Crew members unload more than 17 tons of silver coins on May 16, 2007, in this file photo originally provided by Odyssey Marine Explorations. The coins were recovered from the shipwreck that Odyssey Marine Exploration calls Black Swan. Jonathan Blair / AP

By Jim Loney
Reuters

updated 4:25 p.m. PT, Wed., Aug. 20, 2008

MIAMI - Peru has entered the battle for a multimillion-dollar treasure of gold and silver that Spain alleges a U.S. treasure hunting company looted from a Spanish warship sunk in 1804.

The South American nation filed a conditional claim on Tuesday asking a U.S. court to turn over information about the find, which Spain believes to be the wreckage of the Spanish warship La Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes and treasure it was carrying back from what is now Peru.

“This admiralty proceeding may involve part of the patrimony of the Republic of Peru,” the court filing said.

A Florida lawyer representing Peru was not available for comment and the Peruvian Embassy in Washington declined comment.

The battle between Spain and Florida-based Odyssey Marine Exploration Inc. began after the company announced it had recovered tons of gold and silver coins last year at a wreck site in international waters it code-named “Black Swan.”

The company flew the haul, by some estimates worth $500 million, back to Tampa.

In October, a Spanish warship intercepted an Odyssey treasure-hunting ship after it left the British territory of Gibraltar and escorted it to a Spanish port. Police arrested and then released the ship’s captain.

In May, Spain said it could prove the wreck site was that of the Spanish warship Mercedes, which was attacked by British warships off the Spanish coast in October 1804.

An explosion ripped the vessel apart and it sank, killing more than 200 sailors. It was carrying treasure back to Europe from Peru, which was ruled by Spain at the time.

Spain accused Odyssey of stripping the warship of valuables and artifacts and trying to hide its actions by claiming it did not know the identity of the vessel.

Odyssey has said even if the vessel is determined to be the Mercedes, Spain would still have to prove it was the owner of artifacts found at the site and had not abandoned them.

In a statement issued on Wednesday the company welcomed Peru’s claim.

“We believe that Peru’s filing raises a significant and timely question relating to whether a former colonial power or the colonized indigenous peoples should receive the cultural and financial benefit of underwater cultural heritage…,” chief executive Greg Stemm said.

Click for related content
Deep-sea booty! $500 million in coins found
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Sunken treasure of silver now a court battle

The company said Peru was welcome to take part in a study of any property found to have originated in Peru.

Saying it had never abandoned its interest in its “property and patrimony,” Peru asked the U.S. court in Tampa to turn over information to help it determine if it would make a formal claim for the treasure.

“All of Peru’s sovereign and other rights in its property, artifacts, and other items sunken at sea are and have been reserved.”

Copyright 2008 Reuters.

Well-Preserved Thousand-Year-Old Mummy Found in Peru

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Fox News

A bundle bearing a mummy has been found in Peru’s historic Huaura Valley.

The mummy is thought to have been an elite member of the Chancay culture, a civilization that thrived in the central coast of Peru from about A.D. 1000 to 1400.

The territory of the Chancay was later home to the Incas, who formed what became the largest pre-Columbian empire in America.

Tulane University anthropologist Kit Nelson is the co-director of a team that is in the process of unraveling the mummy.

The mummy was found in the center of a tomb located within a large adobe walled compound. In addition to the mummy, the tomb contained several offerings, including whole vessels, a bag of fruit and other goods.

The individual was wrapped in layers of textiles and several offerings were placed within the layers. The offerings included balls of different colors of cotton, ground corn and corncobs, a bag with metal and a bag with some type of plant material.

The individual was a male, about 30 to 45 years old. He was dressed in two tunics and a loincloth. Around his knees and his waist were slingshots.

Nelson and her fellow researchers, including two physical anthropologists, a textile specialist, a metals expert and a pathologist, have been painstakingly rolling back layer upon layer of textile and documenting the original preparation of the body and the associated offerings.

Their work on the mummy should be completed by November after which the mummy and its objects will be prepared for an exhibition in Lima.

During the period in which the mummy lived, the central coast of Peru was marked by the formation of regional powers after the collapse of the large empires of the Middle Horizon period (A.D. 600).

Two empires expanded through this area during this time of regional reorganization, the Chimu and later the Inca.

Through this period of unrest and imperialism, the Huaura Valley maintained internal cohesion, visible in the continuation of regional style architecture, artifacts and art styles.

This Chancay tomb, the only one excavated and scientifically examined, will shed light on the local social structure and the interaction of the Chancay with the other major powers during this period.

Nelson’s work was funded by Tulane and a grant from National Geographic’s Committee for Research and Exploration.

Copyright © 2008 Imaginova Corp. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Peru may sue Yale for Inca relics’ return

Tiscali.travel

Peru is threatening to sue Yale University for the return of ancient mummies, bones and ceramics taken from the “Lost City of the Incas”, Machu Picchu, by an American explorer nearly a century ago.

In the latest of a series of legal moves by nations trying to recover archaeological relics, Peru’s ambassador to Washington, Eduardo Ferrero, has delivered a warning to the university in Connecticut.

“Peru has notified [Yale’s president] Richard Levin that a lawsuit is prepared if its rights to the archaeological pieces are not recognised,” the Peruvian foreign ministry said in a statement.

Oscar Maurtua, the foreign minister, added: “We are convinced that we have sufficient proof to win in court.” He added that Lima would prefer an out-of-court settlement. Any court action would probably be held in Connecticut.

A spokesman for Yale, Tom Conroy, told the Associated Press news agency that the university had been having discussions with the Peruvian government. “We are hoping for a resolution that is satisfactory to all involved,” he said.

Peru is seeking to retrieve about 5,000 artefacts, including mummified corpses and pottery that the American historian and explorer Hiram Bingham excavated in three expeditions to the ancient high-mountain Incan city of Machu Picchu in 1911, 1912 and 1914.

Peru’s president at the time, Augusto Leguia, gave Bingham permission to export the objects temporarily for scientific study for a period of one year. That was later extended by 18 months, and the items should have been returned in 1916.

Bingham was the first foreigner to reach Machu Picchu. With the 100th anniversary of his discovery approaching, Peruvian officials say it is time to return the collection. Bingham thought the site was either a religious estate inhabited mostly by women, a last Inca stronghold abandoned as the Spanish invaded, or the Incas’ city of origin. The site is now believed to have been a royal summer estate.

Many nations which saw priceless artefacts whisked away to foreign museums have traditionally used diplomatic channels to request their return. This year, Ethiopia saw the return to Axum of an obelisk plundered by Italians 70 years ago.

Some countries are now turning to the courts to recover ancient relics. Greece has decided to sue the J Paul Getty museum in Los Angeles for the return of four antiquities said to have been taken illegally.

Many museums which hold such artefacts argue that they not only promote scientific research of these objects, but allow millions of visitors to see them in cities such as London Paris or New York. Critics argue that it is important for countries to have the objects that reflect their cultural heritage in their own museums.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2008

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1,600-year-old tomb unearthed in Peru

Reuters
Published: July 6, 2008

International Herald tribune

LIMA: Archaeologists have discovered the intact tomb of a pre-Incan leader who lived 1,600 years ago that could help solve mysteries about the ancient Moche civilization, the group’s lead scientist said on Saturday.

The tomb, called Huaca del Pueblo, was dug up in the province of Lambayeque, about 750 kilometers, or 475 miles, north of Lima, a coastal desert region where the Moche culture blossomed between 100 B.C. and A.D. 600.

The find shares characteristics with the Sipan complex, which was discovered in the same area of Peru 20 years ago and is widely considered one of the world’s most important archaeological finds of recent decades.

Both sites include tombs built for prominent figures of the Moche civilization, which is characterized by complex construction techniques and works of art.

“It’s clearly a first-rate find because there is lots of iconography, which are elaborate. It will be a real pleasure to manipulate the data and compare them to sites like Sipan,” said Steve Bourget, 51, a Canadian archeologists.

Bourget, who has worked in the area since 1986, said the tomb includes 14 crowns, masks, jewelry and technologically sophisticated objects made from copper. The find, while important, is less significant than Sipan, he said.

Scientists said the tomb was well preserved, unlike many other archaeological finds in Peru, which has a long history of tomb robbers digging up ancient objects to sell to collectors.

“The site where I worked was well protected, which prevented these things from being destroyed,” he said.

In 2006, the British police handed over a golden treasure from the Moche civilization that had been found in a house in London. The treasure, a mythical octopus with human-like attributes, had been stolen from a relatively unknown archeological site in 1988.

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NatGeo to give Peru documents to claim return of Machu Picchu relics

Lima, Jun. 30 (ANDINA).- National Geographic vice president, Terry Garcia, said Monday the institution will provide Peru important documentation that would be used to claim for the return of all Machu Picchu artifacts currently at Yale University.
This announcement was made in the office of the minister of Health, Hernan Garrido-Lecca, who is also president of the High Level Commission in charge of recovering the archaeological relics at Yale University.

All the letters among National Geographic, Yale University and the American explorer Hiram Bingham will be available for Peru, said García.

National Geographic was Yale University’s partner in Hiram Bingham’s exploration to the famous Inca citadel.

García emphasized National Geographic has repeatedly said that Machu Picchu relics are Peruvian and should return to this Andean country.

In that sense, his institution acknowledges that Peru “lent” these relics to National Geographic and its partner, Yale University, and that the loan timing has already expired.

Garcia is currently in Lima to coordinate with Peruvian authorities a traveling exhibition dedicated to the Inca culture, which will be displayed in the main cities throughout the United States and Europe.

The minister Hernan Garrido-Lecca highlighted Peru is now in a better position to claim Machu Picchu relics than it was a few months ago before the start of negotiations with Yale University.

He said now they have a complete inventory of the relics held by the University, as well as Yale’s acknowledgement of Peru’s rights.

He recalled that Peruvian specialists have found that many of the pieces have not been studied since Hiram Bingham’s time, refuting one of the arguments supporting relics should remain in the United States.

Garrido-Lecca said a new meeting with Yale University will be held on August 5 in Lima.

(END) ECG/LVT

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Spain willing to share contested treasure with Peru

Released : Thursday, June 26, 2008 2:44 PM

Macro World Investor

Madrid, Jun 26 (EFE).- Spain would be willing share with Peru part of what is recovered of the $500 million in coins a U.S. treasure-hunting firm extracted from what Madrid says is a Spanish vessel sunk in 1804.

“It’s not about sharing the treasure, but of preserving that patrimony, common to other Spanish-American countries” at cultural institutions established for that purpose, Spanish Culture Ministry official Jose Jimenez said Thursday at a press conference.

The statement came days after the Peruvian government requested that a U.S. court allow it to see all of the goods found by Odyssey Marine Exploration from the wreck the company has designated as “Black Swan.”

Madrid, which is suing Florida-based Odyssey to recover the $500 million haul, says the treasure came from the Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes, sunk in October 1804 after a battle with British warships off the coast of Portugal in which more than 200 Spanish sailors died.

Among the valuable pieces discovered by Odyssey are coins dating back to the reign of Spanish King Carlos IV that were minted in Lima. That prompted Peru to claim its rights to the cargo even though, as Jimenez noted Thursday, “the (republic) of Peru did not exist” at that time.

“Peru has different problems because it has not signed the (UNESCO) International Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage or the (United Nations) Convention on the Law of the Sea,” said Jimenez, who added that for Spain “it’s not a question of money, but of acting in defense of its historical patrimony.”

In the legal battle taking place in Tampa, Florida, Spain has until Aug. 10 to present before the court the documents that support its claim regarding the origin of the treasure, after which time Odyssey will have another two months to provide counter-evidence.

“But Spain would be open to arriving at some type of agreement with Peru so that, if everything we think exists from Odyssey’s illegal extraction is recovered, there is a way of sharing that treasure with (the Andean nation)” to display the material in a museum setting, Jimenez said.

The ownership questions “are very complex,” but Culture Ministry official Luis Lafuente added that what is at stake is preserving that patrimony “for Spaniards and for all humanity at adequate cultural institutions, and not (allowing) a treasure hunting firm to take it and become richer than what it already is.” EFE

amb/mc

Copyright 2008 EFE News Services (U.S.) Inc.

Provider:
EFE News Service / BAS / EFE Ingles

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