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Ancient Tomb Built to Flood—Sheds Light on Peru Water Cult?

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Ancient Tomb Built to Flood—Sheds Light on Peru Water Cult?:

tlatollotl:

Archaeologists in Peru thought they had discovered something special when they uncovered the tomb of a pre-Inca priestess and eight other corpses in 2011. But an even bigger find was right beneath their feet.

Continuing their search for artifacts a year later, the team dug beneath the priestess, uncovering a basement tomb they believe was built by an ancient water cult and meant to flood.

“This is a very valuable finding,” said Carlos Wester La Torre, head of the excavation and director of the Brüning National Archaeological Museum in the Lambayeque region—a region named after the little-known culture that built the stacked tomb. “The amount of information of this funerary complex is very important, because it changes [what we know of] the political and religious structures of the Andean region.”

The nearly 800-year-old basement burial sheds light on complex Lambayeque social structures and on the worship of water in the culture.

Four sets of waterlogged human remains were found in the flooded tomb, one adorned with pearl and shell beads—indicators of wealth or status. The other three corpses likely were intended to accompany the body into the next world.

The faces of both elite individuals, in the lower and upper tombs, were covered with copper sheets, and wore earspools bearing similar, wavelike designs.

While other saturated burial sites have been discovered in the region, this is the first documented discovery of a stacked grave holding revered people, according to archaeologist Izumi Shimada, a Lambayeque expert at Southern Illinois University who was not part of the excavation team.

A diagram shows a recently unearthed stacked grave of Lambayeque elites. The priestess on the first floor was found seated, while bodies on the bottom floor were found lying down, below the water table (marked by a dotted line).

Water Worship

The Lambayeque, sometimes called the Sicán, had carved out a home along the drought-prone Peruvian coast nearly a hundred years before the Inca arrived.

The stacked tomb sits in a sprawling ceremonial complex called Chotuna-Chornancap, close to the modern city of Chiclayo. The spiritual center’s coastal location, water-themed art, and recently discovered grave may help round out the creation story of the Lambayeque.

According to folklore, their mythical founder, Naymlap, arrived on a raft from the sea and walked on crushed Spondylus shells—a ritual item treasured throughout the Andes. When he died he turned into a bird. 

“These concepts—birds and water—are part of their beliefs and help them understand life and death,” dig leader Wester La Torre said.

The watery grave contained piles of shells and wave-embossed gold earspools—more evidence of the importance of water to the Lambayeque.

They knew the tomb—located below the water table, where the ground is always saturated—would flood, Wester La Torre said. They likely wanted it to flood, he added, perhaps to ensure the region’s agricultural fertility.

This Lambayeque, after all, thrived for nearly 600 years—from A.D. 800 to 1375—in a mercurial environment. To grow food in the desert, they built complex and extensive irrigation systems. And rare periods of torrential rain could wreak nearly as much havoc as the persistent aridity.

The practice of a groundwater burial could also link the Lambayeque to that later Andean culture, the Inca, Wester La Torre said. “The Inca believed that the dead became a seed, which sprouted new life,” he explained. “The way that this person was buried suggests the same process of fertilization, in which the seed, the person, is reborn.”

Stacked Burial

Nearly a year ago, Wester La Torre discovered the first tomb 16 feet (5 meters) underground. While digging deeper for artifacts, his team found the lower tomb under the water table, at that time just 20 feet (6 meters) below the surface.

Stacked burials are highly unusual in Andean archaeology, according to Wester La Torre and Shimada. Typically elite tombs are found in isolation.

While archaeologists have not yet determined the sex of the person in the flooded tomb, Wester La Torre said the individual may have been related to the important woman overhead. Alternatively, the two may have shared a religious, commercial, or political relationship, such as a succession of power.

Changing Tides

While Wester La Torre is confident that the Lambayeque intentionally placed the grave in groundwater, other archaeologists question whether the tomb actually flooded during Lambayeque times. The area water table, they note, fluctuates with rainfall and irrigation levels.

Some archaeologists say modern agriculture may have raised the water table, meaning the original grave would have been dry. The more cropland farmers irrigate, the more run-off they see percolating into the soil and underground reservoirs.

“What we don’t really know is the water table 800 years ago,” says Southern Illinois University’s Shimada. “We don’t know where it was.”

Regardless of water levels, Shimada said, “the single most important aspect of this superimposed tomb is that both [burials] date to a time period that is still not well known. It is one of the very few elite tombs dating to the Late Sicán.”

Having reached the height of their power, the Sicán were buffeted by a drought and huge flood roughly around A.D. 1100.

The disasters launched the culture into a “period of chaos and decline,” Shimada said. The capital moved to a new location, and the civilization entered its late period.

Although the Lambayeque’s territory shrank, their society remained a power in the region, archaeologists say—and the new tomb discovery appears to back them up.

“The tomb suggests that, indeed, shortly after the series of natural disasters … ,” Shimada said, “they maintained a great deal of wealth.”


eastafricaart: Recently repaired stele, Ethiopia. General view...

collective-history: Connacht, formerly anglicised as Connaught,...

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collective-history:

Connacht, formerly anglicised as Connaught, is one of the Provinces of Ireland situated in the west of Ireland.

In Ancient Ireland, it was one of the fifths ruled by a “king of over-kings” (in Irish: rí ruirech). Following the Norman invasion of Ireland, the ancient kingdoms were shired into a number of counties for administrative and judicial purposes.

In later centuries, local government legislation has seen further sub-division of the historic counties. In modern times, clusters of counties have been attributed to certain provinces but these clusters have no legal status.

The province itself, while enjoying common usage and forming a strong part of local identity, has no official function for local government purposes. Along with counties from other provinces, it lies in the North-West constituency for elections to the European Parliament.

via

savage-america: Magic curse against enemies in a trial, written...

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savage-america:

Magic curse against enemies in a trial, written on a lead figurine put in a lead box, found in the enclosure of Aristion, & dating from 420-410 BCE. 

Why We Cry: The Science of Sobbing and Emotional Tearing

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Why We Cry: The Science of Sobbing and Emotional Tearing :

jtotheizzoe:

Be sure to check out this feature over at Brain Pickings, featuring excerpts from Robert R. Provine’s Curious Behavior.

Crying is a uniquely human endeavor, in the sense of it being connected to emotion. So, uh … why the waterworks, science?

“…whether intentional or not, as adult or child, you cry to solicit assistance, whether physical aid or emotional solace. Paradoxically, your adult cry for help is more private than the noisy, promiscuous pronouncement of childhood, often occurring at home, where it finds a select audience. The developmental shift from vocal crying to visual tearing favors the face-to-face encounters of an intimate setting.”

It’s pretty clear, from a behavior standpoint, that emotional eye-gushing is a literal cry for help, for child and adult. It’s interesting to see how crying manifests differently as our relationships mature. But where did the basic act of tearing up come from?

An interesting component in tears, a cell stimulus protein called NGF (nerve growth factor), may have something to do with how our tears evolved from simple lubrication to a way to stimulate eye wound healing and pain-relief, and then finally as a way to get extra care given by our tribe members. Imagine a time before crying was linked to an emotional state: 

Non-emotional, healing tears may have originally signaled trauma to the eyes, eliciting caregiving by tribe members or inhibiting physical aggression by adversaries. This primal signal may have later evolved through ritualization to become a sign of emotional as well as physical distress. 

Very cool stuff. Check out the rest here.

ancientart: Carved Ram’s Horn Cup with Lions and Mounted Rider...

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ancientart:

Carved Ram’s Horn Cup with Lions and Mounted Rider at the Walters Art Museum, USA.

The exterior of this piece is intricately carved in low relief with a figure of a mounted nobleman and heraldic lions among leaf rinceaux. The cup terminates in a carved bust. 

Little is known about this artifact, though this is thought to be from either Asia or Africa, seventeenth-century collectors often could not be sure where objects obtained from sea captians and traders actually came from.

For almost three decades, Colin Steer had wondered what had...

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For almost three decades, Colin Steer had wondered what had caused the living room floor beneath his sofa to dip but it was only after he retired that he discovered his family had been sitting on a piece of history.

Intrigued by the sunken floor, the retired civil servant has uncovered a 33ft medieval well in the house where he and wife Vanessa have lived for almost 25 years.

After three days of work Mr Steer, from Plymouth, Devon, stopped digging at 17ft and is now trying to date the unexpected find. Plans show the well dates back to the 16th century.

“I was replacing the joists in the floor when I noticed a slight depression – it appeared to be filled in with the foundations of the house,” he said.

“I dug down about one foot but my wife just wanted to me to cover it back up because we had three children running around at the time.

“I always wanted to dig it out to see if I could find a pot of gold at the bottom, so when I retired at the end of last year that’s what I started to do.”

(Read more)

ancientpeoples: 7 Wonders of the Ancient World: The Colossus at...

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ancientpeoples:

7 Wonders of the Ancient World: The Colossus at Rhodes 

The Colossus of Rhodes was a statue of the Greek Titan Helios, erected in the city of Rhodes on the Greek island of Rhodes by Chares of Lindosbetween 292 and 280 BC. It is considered one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. It was constructed to celebrate Rhodes’ victory over the ruler of Cyprus, Antigonus I Monophthalmus, whose son unsuccessfully besieged Rhodes in 305 BC. Before its destruction in 226 BC—due to an earthquake—the Colossus of Rhodes stood over 30 meters (107 ft) high, making it one of the tallest statues of the ancient world.

After Rhodes sided with Ptolemy, who claimed parts of the Mediterranean after the death of Alexander the Great in 323BC, Antigonus I Monophtalmus decided to invade Rhodes with an army of 40,000 men.  however, the city was well defended, and Demetrius—whose name “Poliorcetes” signifies the “besieger of cities”—had to start construction of a number of massive siege towers in order to gain access to the walls. The first was mounted on six ships, but these capsized in a storm before they could be used. He tried again with a larger, land-based tower named Helepolis, but the Rhodian defenders stopped this by flooding the land in front of the walls so that the rolling tower could not move.

In 304 BC a relief force of ships sent by Ptolemy arrived, and Demetrius’s army abandoned the siege, leaving most of their siege equipment. To celebrate their victory, the Rhodians sold the equipment left behind for 300 talents and decided to use the money to build a colossal statue of their patron god, Helios. Construction was left to the direction of Chares, a native of Lindos in Rhodes, who had been involved with large-scale statues before. His teacher, the sculptor Lysippos, had constructed a 22 meter (70 ft) high bronze statue of Zeus at Tarentum.

Ancient accounts, which differ to some degree, describe the structure as being built with iron tie bars to which brass plates were fixed to form the skin. The interior of the structure, which stood on a 15 meter (50 foot) high white marble pedestal near the Mandraki harbor entrance, was then filled with stone blocks as construction progressed. Other sources place the Colossus on a breakwater in the harbor. The statue itself was over 30 meters (107 ft) tall. Much of the iron and bronze was reforged from the various weapons Demetrius’s army left behind, and the abandoned second siege tower may have been used for scaffolding around the lower levels during construction. Upper portions were built with the use of a large earthen ramp. During the building, workers would pile mounds of dirt on the sides of the colossus. Upon completion all of the dirt was removed and the colossus was left to stand alone. After twelve years, in 280 BC, the statue was completed. Preserved in Greek anthologies of poetry is what is believed to be the genuine dedication text for the Colossus.

To you, o Sun, the people of Dorian Rhodes set up this bronze statue reaching to Olympus, when they had pacified the waves of war and crowned their city with the spoils taken from the enemy. Not only over the seas but also on land did they kindle the lovely torch of freedom and independence. For to the descendants of Herakles belongs dominion over sea and land.

Modern engineers have put forward a plausible hypothesis for the statue construction, based on the technology of those days (which was not based on the modern principles of earthquake engineering), and the accounts of Philo and Pliny who both saw and described the remains.

The statue stood for 56 years until Rhodes was hit by the 226 BC Rhodes earthquake, when significant damage was also done to large portions of the city, including the harbor and commercial buildings, which were destroyed. The statue snapped at the knees and fell over on to the land. Ptolemy III offered to pay for the reconstruction of the statue, but the oracle of Delphi made the Rhodians afraid that they had offended Helios, and they declined to rebuild it.

The remains lay on the ground as described by Strabo (xiv.2.5) for over 800 years, and even broken, they were so impressive that many traveled to see them. Pliny the Elder remarked that few people could wrap their arms around the fallen thumb and that each of its fingers was larger than most statues.

Eventually the parts were sold off and melted down which is the reason we do no have part of it today. If it hadn’t been melted down then corrosion over time would have also destroyed it. 


iomikron: I found this video posted in the webpage of National...

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iomikron:

I found this video posted in the webpage of National Museum of Scotland, where an exhibition took place, titled “Fascinating Mummies” from February to June. this exhibition was visited by more than 30,000 people. The video represents the results of a study made on the Rhind Mummy. The last part corresponds to my contribution for this particular study…

 [more]

centuriespast: Fragment from a red-figure lekythos: flying...

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centuriespast:

Fragment from a red-figure lekythos: flying Nike
ca. 480 – 470 B.C.E.

Greek, Attic 

Attributed to the Pan Painter 

The Princeton University Art Museum

Photo

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centuriespast: Aryballos with Bellerophon riding Pegasosca. 625...

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centuriespast:

Aryballos with Bellerophon riding Pegasos
ca. 625 – 600 B.C.E. 

Greek 

Early Corinthian 

attributed to the Heraldic Lions Painter 

The Princeton University Art Museum

Archaeological News: Archaeologists Return to Excavate Near Temple Mount in Jerusalem

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Archaeological News: Archaeologists Return to Excavate Near Temple Mount in Jerusalem:

archaeologicalnews:

Beginning August 22, 2012, a team of archaeologists, other specialists, and students from the Herbert W. Armstrong College in Edmond Oklahoma in the U.S. have returned to the site of the headline-making discoveries in the “Ophel” area near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The area contains structural features and artifacts bearing on thousands of years of human occupation. 

The Ophel is the narrow promontory that straddles the southern edge of Jerusalem’s Temple Mount and Old City, and is thought to contain monumental remains extending from at least the time of the early Israelite and Judahite kings through the Byzantine and early Islamic periods. 

Read more.

kidsneedscience: A torus is shape defined as the shape formed...

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kidsneedscience:

A torus is shape defined as the shape formed by rotating a circle around an axis coplanar with the circle.  The resulting shape will have one of three forms:  a ring torus, in which the axis if revolution does not touch the circle; a horn torus, in which the circle is tangent to the axis; and a spindle torus, in which the axis is a chord of the circle.  There are many real examples of the torus shape around the house:  donuts, bundt cakes, life preservers, bicycle inner tubes and cushions.

The word torus is unchanged from Ancient Rome:  the Latin word torus was a cushion.  In architecture, the base of many columns contains a toroid, which acts as a ‘cushion’ for the column.  

GIF of torus shapes courtesy Kieff who created the GIF and released it to the public domain.  Thank you Kieff for such a beautiful image, and thank you for sharing your work with the world!

Image of The Column of Trajan, Rome, Dedicated in A.D. 113 to commemorate the emperor’s victory over the Dacians courtesy Roger Ulrich under a Creative Commons 3.0 license.  Thank you Roger for releasing your word to Creative Commons.


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cocoroachchanel:  Petroglyphs, Monument Valley Navajo Tribal...

Digging Deeper – The Weekly Blog Round-Up – 9th September 2012

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amateurarchaeologist:

The Amateur Archaeologist - Digging Deeper – The Weekly Blog Round-Up – 9th September 2012

It’s been almost a month since I posted the last “Digging Deeper” weekly blog round-up, so without further ado, here are some of the blog posts that caught my attention this week:

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shared via WordPress.com

openaccessarchaeology: New Open Access Article- From the sea to...

dead-men-talking: xmorbidcuriosityx: Poland hopes to identify...

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dead-men-talking:

xmorbidcuriosityx:

Poland hopes to identify remains of Auschwitz hero

In this photo taken Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2012, an archeologist uncovers a skeleton during works at the Powazki cemetery in Warsaw, Poland. More than a hundred skeletons of Poles murdered by the communist regime after World War II have been excavated from a secret mass grave on the edge of Warsaw’s Powazki Military Cemetery during recent digging works. Historians hope to identify among them the remains of Witold Pilecki who volunteered to be an Auschwitz inmate to secretly gather evidence of atrocities there. Photo: Alik Keplicz / AP

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — It could hardly have been a riskier mission: infiltrate Auschwitz to chronicle Nazi atrocities. Witold Pilecki survived nearly three years as an inmate in the death camp, managing to smuggle out word of executions before making a daring escape. But the Polish resistance hero was crushed by the post-war communist regime — tried on trumped-up charges and executed.

Six decades on, Poland hopes Pilecki’s remains will be identified among the entangled skeletons and shattered skulls of resistance fighters being excavated from a mass grave on the edge of Warsaw’s Powazki Military Cemetery. The exhumations are part of a movement in the resurgent, democratic nation to officially recognize its war-time heroes and 20th century tragedies.

“He was unique in the world,” said Zofia Pilecka-Optulowicz, paying tribute to her father’s 1940 decision to walk straight into a Nazi street roundup with the aim of getting inside the extermination camp. “I would like to have a place where I can light a candle for him.”

More than 100 skeletons, mostly of men, have been dug up this summer. On one recent day, forensic workers and archaeologists wearing blue plastic gloves and masks were carefully scraping away at the soil and piecing together bones as if working on a jigsaw puzzle. The front of one skull had been blown away by bullets; another had apparently been bludgeoned; a skeleton showed evidence of multiple gunshot wounds.

Full story here.

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