
Men, women, children killed in ancient conflict found buried with care in Peru
The Inca, despite their fame and mark left on the country, belonged to 'just a blip' in Peruvian history lasting around 300 years, according to visit Peru.
The rest of the time before Spaniards arrived, Peru belonged to a collection of nomadic tribes and some of the oldest cities in South America.
Researchers from the Institute of Archaeology at the University of Wrocław, Poland, were studying these ancient cultures at a site called El Curaca when they came across a special burial, according to an April 5 Facebook post from the institute.
The site is located in the Atico River valley, and previous excavation seasons have revealed stone structures and richly furnished collective burials, according to the institute.
The most recent archaeological season began in October, and a particular mass grave caught the researcher's attention.
The burial was found in a cemetery and held 24 individual people, including men, women and children, according to the post.
They were surrounded by stones and buried with elaborate grave goods, researchers said. Ceramics, bone, stone and textiles were found among the items, suggesting the bodies had been buried to a ritualistic standard and with a significant amount of care.
However, analysis of the human remains found the people had not died naturally, according to the institute.
All individuals exhibited a number of physical injuries to their bodies, all of which could be attributed as their cause of death, researchers said.
This suggests they were likely all killed in some sort of interpersonal conflict between their group and another, according to the post.
The combination of gruesome deaths followed by careful and loving burials also suggests their group was victorious in the conflict, researchers said.
A win for their community would mean the victors could bury their dead per their traditions, according to the post.
Ceramics from the site were dated to the early Formative period, researchers said, between 1800 and 1000 B.C.
Researchers will continue to analyze the remains and grave goods found at the site to learn more about this largely unknown culture, according to the post.
The research is part of the Atico Valley Project, a collaboration between the university and the government of Peru.
Previous studies in the valley have led to the discovery of rock paintings, the remains of Inca roads and shell dumps from gathering and fishing communities along the coast, according to the university.
The Atico Valley is on the southern coast of Peru, about a 450-mile drive south along the Pacific Ocean coastline from Lima.
ChatGPT, an AI chatbot, and Facebook Translate were used to translate the Facebook post from the Institute of Archaeology at the University of Wrocław. Google Translate was used to translate the information page on the Atico Valley Project from the Institute of Archaeology at the University of Wrocław.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Croatian Freediver Shatters Record For Longest-Held Breath
A Croatian freediver has achieved a seemingly impossible feat. On June 14 of this year, Vitomir Maričić took one last gulp of pure oxygen and lay down in a pool. There he remained, cool as a sea cucumber, for 29 minutes and 3 seconds. That's officially the longest held voluntary breath, according to Guinness World Records. Maričić beat the previous record holder by nearly 5 minutes. Nearly half an hour without air is mind boggling. That's roughly twice as long as a bottlenose dolphin is thought to hold its breath. With that sort of performance, Maričić could give a harbor seal a run for its money. With each breath, a seal can replace 90 percent of the air in its lungs – but our species can only replace 20 percent. To keep up, we need more breaths to fill our lungs with fresh air. To get as much oxygen into his body as it could possibly carry, Maričić inhaled pure oxygen for 10 minutes before the attempt. This increased the oxygen dissolved in his blood plasma, which is a crucial reservoir for the body's tissues. On an Instagram reel, Maričić explains that he started his record-breaking attempt with nearly five times more oxygen in his body than usual. Without that, he never could have lasted so long. Even when breathing normal air, however, the Croatian athlete's abilities are impressive. He can hold his breath for up to 10 minutes and 8 seconds. The Guinness World Record for unaided breath-holding is 11 minutes and 35 seconds, and it was set by Branko Petrovic of Serbia in 2014. To put that in perspective, the average person can hold their breath for between 30 and 90 seconds. According to the official Guinness website, Maričić attempted the longest held breath in June to bring attention to ocean conservation. Having already racked up a few related world records so far, perhaps Maričić will next turn his eye to Petrovic's record. Related News Mysterious Inca Data System Extended Further Than We Thought Ancient Teeth Suggest Our Ancestors Lived Side by Side With a Mysterious Hominin Remains of UK Scientist Found 66 Years After Tragic Antarctic Glacier Death Solve the daily Crossword


Miami Herald
2 days ago
- Miami Herald
Expressway work leads to discovery of peculiar 6,000-year-old settlement in Poland
Preparation for the construction of an expressway connecting two towns in southwestern Poland has revealed the remains of an ancient and unusual settlement, officials said. Work on the S8 expressway between Kobierzyce and Jordanów Śląski led to the discovery of a 6,000-year-old agricultural settlement and a 4,000-year-old cemetery, according to an Aug. 15 news release from Nauka w Polsce. Experts said the settlement, dating back to the Neolithic period, is peculiar because it was occupied for about 12 years, which is considered a long time in that historical context. Since those settlers stayed in one place for such a long time, it's no surprise there are artifacts and remains to uncover during a project such as this, archaeologist Ireneusz Klimczak said in the release. The Early Bronze Age cemetery, unrelated to the settlement, is believed to be linked to the Únetice culture, which developed south of Poland, and migrated north to the fertile lands of Poland's Lower Silesia, experts said. More than a dozen graves have been discovered, with the deceased buried in a fetal position with their arms crossed on their chests, experts said in the release. According to the release, the discoveries will not delay the construction of the expressway, which is scheduled to be completed by the fall of 2027. The discovery was made in a region about a 230-mile drive southwest from Warsaw. Google Translate was used to translate the news release from Nauka w Polsce.


Gizmodo
13-08-2025
- Gizmodo
New Details Emerge About Ancient Inca Counting Technology
The Inca were a pre-Columbian civilization whose empire sprawled along South America's Pacific Coast from the 15th to the 16th century CE. Like other Andean peoples, they used khipus (also known as quipus), an intricate cord and knot system used to record information. According to Spanish colonial-era sources, only male Inca elites could make khipus. A new study, however, challenges this widespread notion. In a paper published today in Science Advances, an international team of researchers investigated the primary cord of a khipu from around 1498 CE made from human hair. Their analysis revealed that the individual who wove their hair into the khipu ate a diet commonly associated with commoners, suggesting that a greater diversity of people used the instrument than previously thought. 'Despite recent advances in our understanding of Andean khipus, scholars know little about the specialists who created Inka khipus,' the researchers wrote in the study. 'With limited direct evidence concerning the lives of Inka khipu experts, our knowledge is based mainly on the chronicles of Spanish-language colonial observers.' Researchers believe that khipus were buried alongside their owners when they died. Unfortunately, however, the burials where experts have discovered many Inca khipus were previously looted, meaning they can no longer provide this crucial insight. As such, the team from the new study took a different approach. 'Historically, when human hair was incorporated into a khipu's primary cord, it served as a 'signature' to indicate the person who created the khipu,' the researchers explained. 'Recent advances in elemental analysis–isotope ratio mass spectrometry allowed us to undertake simultaneous carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and sulfur (S) measurements from a single KH0631 hair sample, revealing that this individual consumed a diet characteristic of low-ranking commoners,' they added. 'This evidence suggests that Inka commoners could be involved in creating Inka-style khipus.' Specifically, the individual in question ate tubers and greens instead of meat and corn, which was the typical Inca elite's diet. The researchers' approach also revealed that this khipu specialist, or khipukamayuqs, probably lived in modern-day southern Peru or northern Chile. These results align with the fact that in the 19th and 20th centuries, 'commoners,' such as peasant farmers, farm laborers, and female peasants, created and used khipus. What's more, it bolsters recent research as well as accounts by Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala, a 16th-century Inca nobleman and chronicler, that women in the Inca Empire also made khipus. While the researchers admit that 'KH0631 is only one khipu,' they conclude that 'the new isotopic evidence from KH0631 suggests that khipu literacy in the Inca Empire may have been more inclusive and widespread than hitherto thought.'