4,000-Year-Old Temple, Mural Found in Peru

Lima, Peru
Associated Press
November 11, 2007

Carbon dating tests and excavation of a colorful pre-Incan temple indicate that it was built 4,000 years ago by an advanced civilization, a prominent archaeologist said in comments published Sunday by a Peruvian newspaper. (See photos of the temple.)

Unearthed in Peru's archeologically rich northern coastal desert, the temple has a staircase leading to an altar that was used for worshipping fire and making offerings to deities, Walter Alva, who headed the three-month excavation, told El Comercio.

Some of the walls of the 27,000-square-foot (2,500-square-meter) site—almost half the size of a football field—were painted, and a white-and-red mural depicts a deer being hunted with a net.

Alva said the temple was apparently constructed by an "advanced civilization," because it was built with mud bricks made from sediment found in local rivers instead of rocks.

"This discovery shows an architectural and iconographic tradition different from what has been known until now," said Alva, who discovered and is the museum director for another important pre-Incan find, the nearby Lords of Sipán Moche Tombs (see map).

The carbon dating tests, conducted in the United States, indicate that the site is 4,000 years old, he claimed.

The oldest known city in the Americas is Caral, also near the Peruvian coast, which researchers dated to 2627 B.C.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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