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Monday, May 15, 2006

Celestial Find at Ancient Andes Site

"The discovery in Peru of a 4,200-year-old temple and observatory pushes back estimates of the rise of an advanced culture in the Americas."

Readers of my books may ascertain that this archaeological discovery is particularly significant in demonstrating the origins of religion, extending back millennia in both the Old and New Worlds. Such a find, in fact, may turn those "old" and "new" appellations on their ear, as well as validate some of the more fascinating notions concerning astrotheology, or the natural religion revolving around the sun, moon, planets, stars, solstices, equinoxes and so on.

Over the past couple of centuries, it has been averred by several scholars and researchers that South America in reality possesses significant archaeological sites far older than the mainstream scientific paradigm has determined. Here is one such find, which, although it is "quite a shock" to mainstream archaeologists such as the one quoted below, is therefore not at all surprising to "renegade" researchers. In both The Christ Conspiracy and Suns of God, I evinced that the common ancient religious motifs are astrotheological and that they may be found around the world, centuries to millennia earlier than is widely assumed. Naturally, I was ridiculed for "my" theories on "Atlantis," even though I've never discussed Atlantis per se in my books. This Andean discovery in particular shows that the truth is somewhere closer to what we "radicals" propose.

In Suns of God, I wrote:

"In recent years, a great number of...ruins on all inhabited continents have been discovered that posess astronomical alignments, whether to the sun, moon, planets or constellations. For example, in 1998 it was reported that the 'oldest astronomical megalith alignment' was discovered in Southern Egypt..."

I further related that numerous megalithic sites with astronomical alignments had been found around Europe and Africa, dating to around 10,000 BCE. Furthermore, magnificent European cave drawings dating to 15,000 or more years ago evidently record celestial observations. I also related the studies done during the past two centuries by the aforementioned researchers whose works were not popularly acclaimed but who are now being proved correct in their assertions regarding both the age and the astrotheological significance of many archaeological sites in Central and South America. The astronomical alignments are clearly important and indicate religious significance. In this regard, it may be stated that germane "Christian" holidays such as Christmas and Easter are in fact very ancient astrotheological celebrations revolving in specific around the movements of the sun, i.e., the winter solstice and vernal equinox. These holidays are not, therefore, the dates of the birth and death of a "historical" Jesus Christ.

Celestial Find at Ancient Andes Site

The discovery in Peru of a 4,200-year-old temple and observatory pushes back estimates of the rise of an advanced culture in the Americas.
By Thomas H. Maugh II
Times Staff Writer
May 14, 2006

Archeologists working high in the Peruvian Andes have discovered the oldest known celestial observatory in the Americas — a 4,200-year-old structure marking the summer and winter solstices that is as old as the stone pillars of Stonehenge.

The observatory was built on the top of a 33-foot-tall pyramid with precise alignments and sightlines that provide an astronomical calendar for agriculture, archeologist Robert Benfer of the University of Missouri said.

The people who built the observatory — three millenniums before the emergence of the Incas — are a mystery, but they achieved a level of art and science that archeologists say they did not know existed in the region until at least 800 years later.

Among the most impressive finds was a massive clay sculpture — an ancient version of the modern frowning "sad face" icon flanked by two animals. The disk, protected from looters beneath thousands of years of dirt and debris, marked the position of the winter solstice.

"It's really quite a shock to everyone … to see sculptures of that sophistication coming out of a building of that time period," said archeologist Richard L. Burger of Yale University's Peabody Museum of Natural History, who was not involved in the discovery.

The find adds strong evidence to support the recent idea that a sophisticated civilization developed in South America in the pre-ceramic era, before the development of fired pottery sometime after 1500 BC.

Benfer's discovery "pushes the envelope of civilization farther south and inland from the coast, and adds the important dimension of astronomy to these ancient folks' way of life," said archeologist Michael Moseley of the University of Florida, a noted Peru expert.

The 20-acre site, called Buena Vista, is about 25 miles inland in the Rio Chillon Valley, just north of Lima. "It is on a totally barren, rock-covered hill looking down on a beautiful fertile valley," said Benfer, who presented the find last month in Puerto Rico at a meeting of the Society for American Archeology.

The site is remarkably well preserved, Benfer said, because it rains in the area only about once a year.

The name of the people who inhabited the region is unknown because writing did not emerge in the Americas for 2,000 more years. Some archeologists call them followers of the Kotosh religious tradition. Others call them late pre-ceramic cultures of the central coast. For brevity, most simply call them Andeans.

Benfer and archeologist Bernardino Ojeda of Peru's National Agrarian University have been working at Buena Vista for four years. The site contains ruins dating from 10,000 years ago to well into the ceramic era in the first millennium BC.

The large pyramid and a temple occupy about 2 acres near the center of the site. Radiocarbon dating of cotton and burned twigs found in the temple's offering pit place its use at about 2200 BC.

That is about 400 years after the first pyramid was built in Egypt and about the same time that the peoples who would become the Greeks were settling into the Mediterranean region.

The temple is built of rock that was covered with plaster and painted, although most of the white and red paint has long since flaked off.

Benfer calls it the Temple of the Fox because a drawing of a fox is carved inside a painted picture of another animal, probably a llama, beside each doorway. According to Andean myth, the fox taught people how to cultivate and irrigate plants.

As the team mapped out the site, Benfer observed that a person standing in the doorway of the temple and gazing through a small, flap-covered window behind the altar is aligned with a small head carved onto a notch of a distant hill. The line had an orientation of 114 degrees from true north, pointing southeast.

Benfer does not normally deal with archeoastronomy — the science of ancient astronomy — so he contacted a childhood friend, Larry Adkins of Tustin, and asked him what that angle signified.

Adkins, a physicist who is retired from Rockwell International and who now teaches astronomy at Cerritos College, told him 114 degrees pointed the way to sunrise on the Southern Hemisphere's summer solstice, Dec. 21, the longest day of the year.

"That really got the ball rolling," Adkins said.

The summer solstice marks planting time, as the Rio Chillon begins its annual flooding, fed by melting ice higher up in the Andes. The flooding deposits fresh soil on the land, fertilizing the crops and eliminating the need for manure from domestic animals.

"This was the beginning of flood-plain agriculture," Benfer said. He thinks fishermen from the coast originally moved to the site to grow cotton for use in making fishing nets.

The large frowning disk sits near the door to the temple. It is made of mud plaster and grass and covered with a fine surface of clay.

Benfer speculates that the sculpture represents Pacha Mamma, the most important god of the Andes. He acknowledges the difficulty of proving that, however, because the next known sculpture of the mother goddess does not appear until 800 BC.

"The disk would frown over the sunset on the winter solstice, the last day of harvest," Benfer said.

Alignments in the temple also pointed to the position at the summer solstice of a constellation known in Andean culture as the fox, Benfer said.

Unlike Western constellations, which are outlined by groupings of stars, some Andean constellations were made from dark areas in the sky that are gaps in the bright Milky Way.

Scientists once thought that the gaps represented a lack of stars, but astronomers now know that they are caused by large clouds of dust that block light from distant stars.

The so-called dark cloud constellation of the fox is well-known today in the region, but archeoastronomer Anthony Aveni of Colgate University doubted that it has maintained its shape for four millenniums.

"He has an alignment. That's neat," Aveni said. But the idea that the ancients were looking at the same constellation "is a bit of a leap for me."

Last summer, Benfer's team also partially excavated a second sculpture, that of a life-sized human figure playing a pipe. The figure is sitting with its legs sculpted in high relief and hanging over the edge of one of a series of short platforms that lead down to what appears to be another temple.

The remaining 18 acres of the site have a variety of buildings, most of them from later cultures, that include a ceremonial center, stepped pyramids and what apparently was a residence center for elites. Most of those have been looted.

Oval houses that probably served as homes for families of commoners sit across a ravine from the main pyramid.

There were probably other buildings farther down the slopes, Benfer said, "but the Chillon River removes everything from time to time."

Evidence of pottery indicates that the site was inhabited for centuries, but it is not yet clear whether or how it was eventually abandoned.

"There were people in the valley at the time of the Spanish Conquest, but they were of several ethnic groups," Benfer said.

That suggests that the sophisticated civilization was eventually replaced by small bands of farmers who immigrated from various areas.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Fascinating stuff! I am also intrigued by ancient Eqypt and wonder what people's thoughts are concerning the age of the Sphinx - contemporary with the pyramids? or build (to depict a full lion) 1,000s of years earlier? (The Orion Mystery)

I also wonder how accurate our 'picture' is of ancient civilizations. There are those who feel all that's left is 'refinement' of what we already know - but others who imagine that we have vastly underestimated the time frame and achievements of those civilizations which have not left much trace of their existence.