Archaeologists in Peru uncover Incan burial site in desert valley
JULY 5, 2018 / 11:36 AM / A DAY AGO
Reuters Staff
2 MIN READ
TUCUME, Peru (Reuters) - Archaeologists in Peru have uncovered an extensive Incan burial site inside an adobe pyramid in a coastal desert valley far from the Andean heart of the empire.
Two dozen cave-like tombs with human remains and pottery from the Incan culture have been unearthed so far at the Tucume Archaeological Site, Jose Manuel Escudero, director of the archaeological team working there, said on Thursday.
The finding was a reminder of the vast terrain - from the Pacific coast to the high Andes - that the Incan Empire, using a network of roads and a labor-based tax system, controlled before the Spanish conquest in the 16th century.
Tucume, some 400 miles north of the Peruvian capital, Lima, is believed to have been first settled by the Lambayeque coastal people at the turn of the 12th century before being occupied by the Chimu culture and later the Incan Empire some 500 years ago.
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https://in.reuters.com/article/peru-archaeology-tombs/archaeologists-in-peru-uncover-incan-burial-site-in-desert-valley-idINKBN1JV2CQ?rpc=401&
Túcume
Túcume
Lambayeque/Sican (800-1350 AD)
Peru
Click on the pictures
http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/tucume-3.htm