Las huacas del volcán Chimborazo (Ecuador) y sus relaciones de visibilidad con santuarios de altura prehispánicos

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Abstract

The volcano Chimborazo, located in Ecuador, was mentioned in the early chronicles of the Spaniards as a sacred mountain for the people of the ancient Andean world. In this article I will analyze, for the first time, three main archaeological sites, two of them at the bottom of the glaciers of the Chimbora- zo and the other one at its foothill. One of the main archaeological sites located at Chimborazo's glaciers is known as "Huau- qui Chimborazo," and we can find it at the west slope of the mountain. This site and the reason that might explain its location, 4,800 meters above sea level, is the relation it has with very ancient fragments of lava flows that characterize this place. Nearby this archaeological complex there are dozens of little archaeological structures which have been documented (locally known as yaathas) with significant visual contact with one of the Chimbo- razo hills. The second main archaeological site is located on the southern side of the Chimborazo at 4,600 meters above sea level. It is characterized by another group of yaathas and an inusual proximity to a cave which has been used as a meeting point for pilgrims in modern times. Finally, the third archaeological site is located at the southern side of the Chimborazo volcano, at 3,600 meters above sea level. It is a kancha or an Inca architectural con-struction, probably built to give assistance to the pre-Hispanic pilgrims who were climbing to this sacred mountain to give sacrificial offerings. /Ecuador, Chimborazo volcano, archaeological complex, sacrificial offerings].

Original languageSpanish
Pages (from-to)127-152
Number of pages26
JournalAnthropos
Volume112
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2017

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