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1 posted on 01/06/2005 11:17:07 AM PST by blam
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To: SunkenCiv
GGG Ping.

(This is a CNN article reporting on the Nature article)

New insight into ancient Americans

By Simon Hooper for CNN
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 Posted: 6:26 AM EST (1126 GMT)

Archaeologists have uncovered fresh evidence of a civilization more than 5,000 years old in Norte Chico. Image:

(CNN) -- New research has shown that the oldest civilization in the Americas was far more complex than previously imagined.

Ancient Americans settled in the Norte Chico region of Andean Peru more than 5,000 years ago, abandoning hunter-gathering and quickly developing a society that featured monumental architecture, agriculture, housing and a barter-based economy, recent archaelogical excavations have revealed.

The Norte Chico civilization existed for roughly 1,200 years from around 3,000 BC and spread to include 20 major residential centers across 700 square miles, according to the work of a team led by Professor Jonathan Haas of the Field Museum in Chicago and his wife Professor Winifred Creamer, an anthropologist at Northern Illinois University.

The pair's research, based on new radiocarbon datings from excavation samples, was published this month in the scientific journal Nature.

The importance of Norte Chico, a dry and inhospitable region 100 miles north of Lima, has been largely overlooked in the past because of the absence of ancient artifacts or treasures, art or writing. Unlike other ancient civilizations, its inhabitants failed to develop ceramics.

But Haas and Creamer said their work proved the existence of a widespread and thriving community.

At the same time that the Egyptians were building pyramids, the ancient Andeans were beginning to construct momuments of their own. Each of the sites studied by Haas and Creamer's team featured large platform mounds where rectangular terraced stone pyramids would have stood.

They also uncovered evidence of circular plazas and houses built from adobe, wooden poles, cane and mud. Radiocarbon dating performed on plant remains showed that reed and wild cane were woven into bags to carry rocks to construction sites.

"This wasn't a single site where people were doing something really unusual, but a whole region, a whole culture, where people were organized to produce large pyramids and sunken plazas -- something the Americas hadn't seen before," said Creamer.

"The people who built the first of these structures had no model to go by, no precedent to use in building a monument. It's a bit like deciding to build a functioning spaceship in your back yard, and succeeding."

Haas and Creamer also said their work challenged existing assumptions that early Andean development was driven by a maritime culture.

Early communal large-scale construction, between 3,200 BC and 2,000 BC took place both inland and on the coast. But subsequent centuries were characterized by the occupation of inland sites watered by irrigation canals, which enabled the growth of cotton and food plants such as squash, beans and avocadoes.

But inland settlements and coastal communities remained economically linked by a system of regular exchange. Shellfish and fishbones have been recovered inland, where inhabitants also ate anchovies and in return provided cotton for fishing nets.

As well as lacking pottery, art and writing, the Norte Chico civilization also differed from other ancient cultures in its lack of dependency on a staple grain crop.

"This early culture appears to have developed not only without pottery, arts and crafts but also without a staple grain-based food, which is usually the first large-scale agricultural product of complex societies," said Creamer. "The ancient Peruvians took a different path to civilization."

Haas and Creamer hope further excavations will uncover more about the life in the communities of Norte Chico. They also hope to explain how civilization developed in such a harsh environment and why it came to an end.

"Why did this happen here of all places? It's not a particularly easy environment, but the big moment may have been when someone discovered that irrigation wasn't that difficult," said Creamer.

"You can use irrigation to explain both the rise and fall of the Norte Chico region. By 1,800 B.C., when this civilization is in decline, we begin to find extensive canals farther north. People were moving to more fertile ground and taking their knowledge of irrigation with them. The Norte Chico ultimately became something of a frontier zone between northern and southern centers of influence and political development."

But Haas and Creamer are convinced that Norte Chico was the crucible of American civilization.

"The scale and sophistication of these sites is unheard of anywhere in the New World at this time, and almost any time," said Haas.

"The cultural pattern that emerged in this small area in the third millennium B.C. later established a foundation for 4,000 years of cultural florescence in other parts of the Andes."

2 posted on 01/06/2005 11:25:12 AM PST by blam
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To: blam

Winifred Creamer
3 posted on 01/06/2005 12:09:57 PM PST by syriacus (Was Margaret Hassan murdered because she could have testified about the oil for food corruption?)
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To: blam
Project Publications
Ruth Shady, Jonathan Haas and Winifred Creamer 2001 "Dating Caral, a Preceramic Urban Center in the Supe Valley on the Centray Coast of Peru". Science 292:723-726.
4 posted on 01/06/2005 12:15:48 PM PST by syriacus (Was Margaret Hassan murdered because she could have testified about the oil for food corruption?)
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To: blam
"Who talking to me? You talking to ME?"


8 posted on 01/06/2005 12:30:42 PM PST by pabianice
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To: blam; FairOpinion; Ernest_at_the_Beach; SunkenCiv; 24Karet; 3AngelaD; 4ConservativeJustices; ...
Thanks Blam. More to come, the browser went kablooey after I'd built about half of what was supposed to be a pretty good post for this topic. Egad.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on, off, or alter the "Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list --
Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
The GGG Digest
-- Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)

17 posted on 01/06/2005 10:48:42 PM PST by SunkenCiv (the US population in the year 2100 will exceed a billion, perhaps even three billion.)
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To: blam

Okay... the problem (whatever it was) recurred when I again closed the tab which had the New Scientist article I'm going to quote any second now...

poor Max Uhle... discovered the site 100 years ago... at least he didn't live long enough to witness this credit grabbing fistfight...

Mountain metropolis
Jeff Hecht
New Scientist
27 April 2001
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn674

Discovered in 1905 by archaeologist Max Uhle, Caral is 23 kilometres from the ocean in the Supe Valley of central Peru. Early archaeologists recognised its mounds as ancient monuments, but turned their attention elsewhere after finding no ceramics.

Ruth Shady of the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Lima took a closer look several years ago, and her excavations revealed six giant platform mounds spread over a 65 hectare area; the largest mound is 160 by 150 metres wide, and 18 metres high.

The absence of pottery indicated Caral was old, but Haas's carbon dates were a surprise.

Peru Holds Oldest New World City
Bruce Bower
Week of April 28, 2001; Vol. 159, No. 17 , p. 260
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20010428/fob1.asp

Although archaeologists discovered it in 1905, Caral had attracted little scientific attention until now. It lies in a remote area with no paved roads or basic amenities. Moreover, the site contains no pottery, since its residents didn't make ceramic vessels. This has discouraged both archaeologists and looters.

Creamer makes headlines with Peru research
by Tom Parisi
Last Updated: May 3, 2001
http://www.niu.edu/PubAffairs/NT/2001/may7/creamer.html

...Researchers also have surmised construction methods. Creamer said the ancient Peruvians used shicra, or reeds, to weave mesh bags. They filled the bags with rocks from the nearby riverbed and hauled them to the construction sites. "They would carry this to the building site and throw the whole thing in," Creamer said. "In her excavations, Ruth Shady has actually been able to retrieve the rocks from individual bags."

Anthropologists Establish Date and Importance of the Americas’ Oldest City
Greg Borzo
Thursday, April 26, 2001
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/museum_info/press/press_hass.htm

CHICAGO – New radiocarbon dates indicate that the site of Caral (120 miles north of Lima, Peru) was home to the earliest known urban settlement – with monumental corporate architecture and irrigation agriculture – in the New World. The surprising evidence pushes the development of these important advances in the Americas back to as early as 2627 B.C. – a time when the pyramids were being built in Egypt.

In a report published in the April 27, 2001 issue of Science, Dr. Ruth Shady Solis of the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Lima and her colleagues, Jonathan Haas, Chicago’s Field Museum, and Winifred Creamer, of Northern Illinois University and Field Museum Adjunct Curator, describe the results of the testing of plant fibers taken from excavations conducted by Dr. Shady at Caral.

Caral: Oldest City in the New World
A conversation with Dr. Ruth Shady
The Archaeology Channel
http://www.archaeologychannel.org/caralint.html

Dr. Ruth Shady of the Museum of Archaeology at the National University of San Marcos, Lima, Peru, is Project Director for ongoing research at Caral. She is working closely on this project, in the field and in analysis and publications, with the Field Museum, represented by Dr. Jonathan Haas.

First City in the New World?
http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues02/aug02/caral.html

Research developed by Peruvian archaeologist Ruth Shady Solís of San Marcos University suggests that Caral, as the 150-acre complex of pyramids, plazas and residential buildings is known, was a thriving metropolis as Egypt's great pyramids were being built. The energetic archaeologist believes that Caral may also answer nagging questions about the long-mysterious origins of the Inca. Caral may even hold a key to the origins of civilizations everywhere... Shady's team found 32 flutes made of pelican and condor bones and 37 cornets of deer and llama bones. "Clearly, music played an important role in their society," says Shady. Eventually Caral would spawn 17 other pyramid complexes scattered across the 35-square-mile area of the Supe Valley. But based on Caral's size and scope, Shady believes that it is indeed the mother city of the Incan civilization.


18 posted on 01/06/2005 11:11:56 PM PST by SunkenCiv (the US population in the year 2100 will exceed a billion, perhaps even three billion.)
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