Thursday, December 22, 2011

Huaca de la Luna: Peru's most beautiful ruin?

Peru’s most beautiful ruins are not located at Machu Picchu. The Inca construction there is an example of masterful engineering, and has a jaw dropping location, but, in the end, the ruins themselves are a series of very well-built gray walls. I know, it’s not the Incas’ fault that their decorative elements were spirited away by dashing archaeologists, but that doesn’t change the experience for visitors today.

If you want to see the height of ancient, artistic creativity, you’ll have to head to an archaeological site on the other end of the country: the Huaca de la Luna. The site receives just 300 visitors per day, not because it is hard to get to (it is only about fifteen minutes by taxi from the center of Trujillo, Peru’s third-largest city), but because it has never been mythologized or marketed, which is a shame.



The pyramid was built by the Moche culture about 1,500 years ago- well before the Inca came to power in the southern Andes. Along with the Huaca del Sol, it book-ended a city of some 20,000 people in the Moche River valley, under the folds of the Cerro Blanco hill. The Huaca de la Luna was the religious center for the Moche, a site for sacrifices and rituals.

The ruins of the ancient Moche city, the Huaca del Sol, the Moche River valley.

One approaches the site today from the Trujillo suburb of Moche. Don’t be put-off by the pyramid’s external appearance: it looks like a massive pile of dirt and bricks, covered by some metal roofing. The good stuff is all inside.



What is the good stuff, you ask? Ancient friezes covering the interior walls of the temple, with their original, 1,500-year-old paint jobs. Because the Moche kept building new temples on the old site, the bricks of each new temple preserved the paintings of the old one.

Archaeologists have peeled back the layers to fin representations of gods and religious ceremonies. One massive room has images of Ai-Apaec, the principal Moche god, covering every wall, with different facial expressions. It’s hard not to ponder at the world view (and San Pedro cactus) that led to such art.



Ai apaec friezes

On an outside patio, your guide will explain which chambers were used for human sacrifices, and how the victims were selected through ritual warfare. Inside, the altar where their blood was consecreated to the gods is perfectly preserved, and the paintings around it have been maintained.

The most breath-taking site is one you’ll see on your way out of the pyramid. As you exit by the ancient ramp that served as the entrance to the temple, you will see the external wall of the final pyramid. Its entire side is covered in painted friezes, dating back a thousand years. Here, more than any other place I’ve been in Peru, it is easy to see what the ancient city looked like when it was occupied.


The external wall of the pyramid

One amazing aspect of the Huaca de la Luna site is that excavations have, basically, only begun. The ancient city is just being explored now, and archaeologists have not done excavation in the Huaca del Sol, which could hold similar artistic treasures. It’s an exciting, evolving attraction on the northern coast.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Cusco: Descubren momia de niño preinca en distrito de Livitaca

Una momia infante preinca, de 50 centímetros de alto, fue hallada por personal de la Dirección Regional de Cultura, en buen estado de conservación, dentro de una de las tumbas del complejo arqueológico de Chiñisiri, jurisdicción del distrito de Livitaca, provincia de Chumbivilcas. 

El hallazgo sorprendió al personal del ente cultural que logró divisar la existencia de la momia infante, cuando realizaban trabajos de recuperación de dicho complejo arqueológico, caracterizado por la existencia de tumbas preincas.

Según el arqueólogo Jorge Atauconcha, representante de la Dirección Regional de Cultura, se trata de un infante de unos 5 a 6 años de edad, probablemente de la cultura Wari, quien fue sepultado en las tumbas de Chiñisiri por alguna enfermedad que padeció.

El profesional informó que la momia será debidamente estudiada por personal de su institución con el propósito de conocer la antigüedad del hallazgo.

Entre tanto, acompañado de pobladores y autoridades, la pequeña momia fue internada dentro del local del municipio distrital de Livitaca para su conservación y estudio.