Osteological remains of condors from the Late Formative Cerro Punta Blanca, Lorin Valley, Peru.
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2448-1750.revmae.2012.106714Mots-clés :
Condor sacrifice, Zooarchaeology, Lime, Late Formative, Lurin Valley, Cognitive archaeology, Green HillsRésumé
In 2007 we found same partial skeletal remains of two Andean condors with evidence of cut marks and fractures postmortem in archaeological context of lime exploitation during the Late Formative period, at the site of Cerro Punta Blanca (300-100 b.C.). It is located at lomas of Jatosisa, Lurin valley, Peru. These bones were associated to a pottery fragment representing a snake.
This association permitted us to relate it to the myth of transformation of the snake into a condor seen in petroglyphs, bone flutes and textiles of the Archaic and Formative periods and registered in etnohistorical texts and astronomic representations. This study confirms the importance of the condor in Andean ritual context of inhabitants of green hills since two millenniums ago.
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(c) Copyright Alfredo José Altamirano Enciso, Noé Jave Calderón 2012
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Ce travail est disponible sous licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale - Pas de Modification 4.0 International.