Above GATEWAY:
Archeologist Robert Benfer’s team found this clay sculpture of a
frowning face at the Buena Vista site near Lima, Peru. The disk,
marks the position of the Southern Hemisphere’s winter solstice.
(Robert Benfer / University of Missouri)
Celestial
Find at Ancient Andes May 14, 2006.
Source:
By Thomas H. Maugh II, Los Angeles Times
Archaeology | Stonehenge-era celestial
observatory oldest found in region.
Archeologists
working high in the Peruvian Andes have
discovered the oldest 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-high pyramid with
precise alignments and sight lines 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.
The discovery adds
strong evidence to the recent idea that a
sophisticated civilization developed in South
America in the pre-ceramic era, before the
development of fired pottery some time after
1500 B.C.
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 at a meeting of
the Society for American Archeology in Puerto
Rico.
The site is
remarkably well preserved, Benfer added, because
it only rains in the area about once a year.
Benfer and
archaeologist Bernardino Ojeda of Peru's
National Agrarian University have been working
at Buena Vista for four years. The entire site
contains ruins dating from 10,000 years ago to
well into the ceramic era in the first
millennium B.C.
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 B.C. 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.
Benfer calls it the
Temple of the Fox because a drawing of a fox is
incised 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 saw 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 just
slightly south of east. That points to sunrise
on the Southern Hemisphere's summer solstice,
Dec. 21, the longest day of the year.
Dec. 21 marks
planting time, as the Rio Chillon begins its
annual flooding, fed by melting ice higher up in
the Andes.
"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.
"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.
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.