[Aztlan] 80 SCATTERED DEAD FOUND AT CHACHAPOYAS FORTRESS OF KUELAP

michael ruggeri michaelruggeri at mac.com
Wed Sep 26 23:42:08 CDT 2007


Listeros,

This is a much expanded report following up on the report of 40  
mummies found at Kuelap a few days ago. The facts have changed,

Mike Ruggeri





80 Ancient "Cloud Warrior" Skeletons Found in Peru Fort
Kelly Hearn
for National Geographic News
September 26, 2007

The remains of 80 members of an ancient civilization have been  
unearthed in the ruins of a fortress high in the Peruvian Andes, an  
archaeologist has announced.

The skeletons bear evidence of extremely quick deaths, the bodies  
having been found where they fell, without burial, reported Alfredo  
Narváez, director of Peru's Kuélap Archaeological Complex  
Restoration and Conservation project.

The remains were discovered in the fortress of Kuélap, a mountain  
stronghold of the Chachapoya, a culture known as the "cloud warriors"  
that thrived in Amazonian cloud forests from the 9th to the 15th  
century A.D.

"In recent days we have discovered the bones of at least 80 people,"  
Narváez said late yesterday.

The bodies belonged to people of all ages and both sexes and were  
found alongside everyday utensils and tools, he said.

"We observed bodies together, dispersed and in positions they seemed  
to be when they died," he said.

The haphazard positioning of the bodies, the presence of everyday  
artifacts, and the lack of ceremonial burials falls counter to what  
experts say was the Chachapoya custom of meticulously burying relatives.

"It seems it all happened very quickly, without time to bury the  
bodies," Narváez said.

"Our team began to ask questions," he said. "Was there violence? Had  
there been an epidemic due to the presence of the Spanish? Future  
studies will give the answer."

Misleading Reports

Narváez first reported the discovery last week, prompting regional  
press reports that 40 mummies had been found.

The body count, however, has increased in recent days, according to  
the researcher, and none of the bodies—all found under deep layers  
of rock and dirt—were mummified. (See a photo of a Chachapoya mummy.)

"They aren't mummies but bodies found on inside floors and outside  
near a group of dwellings located very close to the fortress's main  
temple, once known as Tintero," Narváez said.

Early press reports also quoted Narváez as saying that some of the  
artifacts found were of Inca origin. The researcher, however, did not  
confirm by press time whether that was the case.

The Chachapoya were known as fierce fighters, staving off Inca  
invasions in strongholds like Kuélap until falling to the empire in  
A.D. 1470.

Experts praised the news of the discovery, noting that it may shed  
light on the poorly understood civilization.

"This is a truly important new find," said Daniel H. Sandweiss, an  
anthropologist at the University of Maine.

"The apparently violent deaths of these individuals and potential  
association with Inca pottery, as press reports suggest, could shed  
light on either the Inca conquest of the Chachapoya or on the events  
at the time of the Spanish conquest of the Inca."

Others agreed.

"I can only say that the finds strike me as tremendously important,  
as the ultimate fate of Kuélap's residents remains poorly known,"  
said Warren B. Church, anthropologist at Columbus State University.

"This find is really as important as any similar discovery might be  
at Machu Picchu," he added. "However, where the two mountaintop sites  
rival one another in scale and majesty, we probably know considerably  
less about Kuélap."

Epidemic or Violent invasion?

The job of teasing out the forensics of the newfound remains falls on  
bioarchaeologists like Marla Toyne, a doctoral candidate at Tulane  
University.

Toyne, who worked with Narváez for four years at Kuélap and has  
spoken with him by telephone in recent days, said she was told the  
bodies were found in a residential section of the fortress near  
Tintero but not at the temple itself.

"We've had a similar finding earlier to the south of the Tintero when  
we found three children sprawled on the floor," Toyne said.

"When I examined them, there were no signs of cut marks or evidence  
of trauma that I could observe."

Toyne said she could possibly determine whether the newly found  
bodies suffered from violent trauma, but it is much more difficult to  
determine if they died from a fast-moving epidemic.

Under normal conditions, people at Kuélap were buried in floors,  
caves, or walls, she added.

"It is clear they practiced a form of ancestor reverence," she said.  
"The deceased were treated with care. These individuals were not."

The victims have been killed by someone wanting to deny them a proper  
burial, or they may simply have lacked family members to bury them.

"But there still remains the question of who they were," she said.

"Were they Incas against whom the locals rebelled and killed off? Or  
were they locals whom the Incas attacked and killed to conquer the  
site? As always there are more questions raised than answers."

Keith Muscutt, an assistant dean at the University of California,  
Santa Cruz, has studied the Chachapoya culture.

"So little scientific excavation has occurred in this remote region,  
and even less published," he said, "that this report from Narváez, an  
experienced and highly respected Peruvian archaeologist, promises to  
open an important new chapter in Chachapoya archaeology."


Mike Ruggeri's Ancient America Museum Exhibitions, Conferences and  
Lectures
http://community-2.webtv.net/Topiltzin-2091/AncientAmerica/index.htm









More information about the Aztlan mailing list