Archaeology: 4,000 year old temple and theatre discovered at La Otra Banda, Peru

Field Museum scientist Luid Muro Ynoñán and a team of archaeologists have excavated the remains of a 4,000-year-old temple and theatre in coastal Peru.

“It was amazing,” says Muro Ynoñán, a research scientist at the Negaunee Integrative Research Centre at the Field Museum in Chicago. “This discovery tells us about the early origins of religion in Peru. We still know very little about how and under which circumstances complex belief systems emerged in the Andes, and now we have evidence about some of the earliest religious spaces that people were creating in this part of the world.”

Peru’s most famous site, Machu Picchu, was built by the Inca Empire around 600 years ago in the 15th century AD. This newly discovered temple predates this by 3,500 years. “We don’t know what these people called themselves, or how other people referred to them. All we know about them comes from what they created: their houses, temples, and funerary goods” said Ynoñán.

                                            


From: METEORED

Visit Website https://www.weaversnest.org/ for more information on Archaeology and History.

                                                                                              

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