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The
Nazca culture flourished in Peru from
about 200 AC
to 800 DC.
One of the common aspects of the pre-Inca
and the Inca culture is that they created
civilizations
in very inhospitable places,
like inaccessible high Andes Mountains
or living in the middle of the desert.
The forgotten Culture of Nasca was discovered
in the sands of the Nasca
Desert, and it was brought to evidence
both by grave robbers and by archeologists.
In the amazing Chauchilla Cemetery,
bodies from the ancient Nasca people
were preserved by natural
mummification in the arid
climate.
Through their habit
of burying their people,
this Culture left to us mummies, ceramics,
colorful textiles, skull and devices,
practically untouched.
Chauchilla is about 30
km from Nasca city and it
impresses by the quantity of mummies
still available for visiting.
Unfortunatelly, it was a known location
by thiefs or tombs
robbers, mainly in the last
part of the XX century. They used to
invade the tombs, picked the treasures
and the mantles , and just left the
mummies
and some belongs of less importance
exposed on
the desert.
The poor population took advantage of
this tombs. Some belongs, specially
clothes, were sold
in the market hicking almost
U$ 20.000,00 ( and now you guess the
purpose of so much robbery).
Note that specially european and north
american collectors have act as receptors,
incentiving robbers to keep theirs robbings.
Peruvian law are more severe now, and
it is considered a serious
crime to take out of the
country such a cultural richness.
Until 1997, visitors just found entire
skeletons, bones, ceramics and some
artefacts simply
leaved in the sun.
Because of those vandal acts, due to
the poverty
of the population, today
the cemetery has enormous quantities
of "eyes",
which means, holes
left as scars in the sand.
Happilly, this situation has changed.
Scientists by Ica State and the local
touristic industry organized themselves
and reconstructed
the burial sites in the way
they were found and protected the area
for visitation, which is now an official
archeological zone.
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