GESTIÓN DEL AGUA EN EL PERÚ ANTIGUO Agricultura, Sociedad Y Desarrollo, Vol

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

GESTIÓN DEL AGUA EN EL PERÚ ANTIGUO Agricultura, Sociedad Y Desarrollo, Vol Agricultura, Sociedad y Desarrollo ISSN: 1870-5472 [email protected] Colegio de Postgraduados México Ponce-Vega, Luis A. PUQUIOS, QANATS Y MANANTIALES: GESTIÓN DEL AGUA EN EL PERÚ ANTIGUO Agricultura, Sociedad y Desarrollo, vol. 12, núm. 3, julio-septiembre, 2015, pp. 279-296 Colegio de Postgraduados Texcoco, Estado de México, México Disponible en: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=360543277002 Cómo citar el artículo Número completo Sistema de Información Científica Más información del artículo Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina, el Caribe, España y Portugal Página de la revista en redalyc.org Proyecto académico sin fines de lucro, desarrollado bajo la iniciativa de acceso abierto PUQUIOS, QANATS Y MANANTIALES: GESTIÓN DEL AGUA EN EL PERÚ ANTIGUO PUQUIOS, QANATS AND SPRINGS: WATER MANAGENT IN ANCIENT PERÚ Luis A. Ponce-Vega Universidad Nacional Federico Villareal. Lima, Perú. ( [email protected] ) RESUMEN ABST RA CT En esta era marcada por el cambio climático, la desertica - In this era marked by climate change, desertication and ción y el estrés hídrico se precisan como soluciones alternati - water stress, low-cost and high-eciency alternative solutions vas de bajo costo y alta efectividad para proporcionar agua a are required to provide low-income rural communities with las comunidades rurales de bajos ingresos, a n de satisfacer water, in order to satisfy their agricultural and domestic sus necesidades agrícolas y domésticas en armonía con su rea - needs in harmony with their geographic reality. is study lidad geográca. La presente obra examina cómo las socieda - examines how agrarian societies of the Nasca culture faced des agrarias de la cultura Nasca enfrentaron estos desafíos en these challenges in one of the most arid deserts in the world, uno de los desiertos más áridos del mundo, así como en los and in the Andes of southern Perú, near the city of Cusco, andes del sur peruano, cerca de la ciudad de Cusco, en áreas in areas with intense rains, dicult geography and scarce de intensas lluvias, difícil geografía y escasas tierras de culti - cultivation lands. e objective is to understand, specically, vo. Se desea conocer, especícamente, cómo se obtuvo, guar - how water was obtained, stored and distributed, and what dó y distribuyó el agua y qué importancia tuvo el uso del agua importance the use of underground and spring water had; subterránea y la de manantiales; se desea saber, igualmente, el likewise, the aim is to understand Perú’s potential in terms potencial del Perú en cuanto a aguas subterráneas. Se revisa of underground waters. Specialized literature is reviewed la literatura especializada para responder estas interrogantes to respond these questions and to explore how water y conocer cómo se realizó la gestión del agua en estas socieda - management was carried out in these agrarian societies. It is des agrarias. Se plantea también que estas técnicas pueden ser also suggested that these techniques can be strengthened with potenciadas con tecnología de punta para mejorar la gestión cutting edge technology to improve the management of water de los recursos hídricos, como parte del esfuerzo internacio - resources, as part of the international eort to face climate nal para enfrentar el cambio climático. change. Palabras claves : agua subterránea, drenaje, muyus, Nasca, tierras Key words : underground water, drainage, Nasca, arid lands. áridas. INT RODUCT ION INT RODUCC IÓN ater control was a vital issue in classical l control del agua fue un tema vital en la Roma Rome, as well as in other ancient clásica, así como en otras civilizaciones anti - Wcivilizations where aqueducts, cisterns, Eguas donde los acueductos, cisternas, reservo - reservoirs, fountains and pumps satised the water rios, pilones y surtidores satisfacían las necesidades needs, agricultural and urban, being an essential part hídricas, agrícolas y urbanas, siendo parte esencial of their legacy, which also includes, naturally, the de su legado, que también incluye, por supuesto, al nymphaeum , source of exceptional beauty and model nymphaeum , fuente de excepcional belleza y modelo of the ornamental use of water, honoring springs’ del uso ornamental del agua, que honró a las ninfas nymphs, protectors of the vital resource (Wilson, de los manantiales, protectoras del vital recurso (Wil - 2008). son, 2008). Water was also a priority in the Middle East, cradle of the rst civilizations. Not only did they * Autor responsable v Author for correspondence. Recibido: diciembre, 2013. Aprobado: febrero, 2015. build the rst canals, pipes and siphons, but also the Publicado como ARTÍCULO en ASyD 12: 279-296. 2015. qanat , a structure composed of tunnels and wells that 279 AGRICULTURA, SOCIEDAD Y DESARROLLO , JULIO - SEPTIEMBRE 2015 En el Cercano Oriente, cuna de las primeras civi - supplied water to the most arid lands in the world lizaciones, también se dio prioridad al agua. No solo and which, in Wilson’s opinion, represented one of construyeron los primeros canales, tuberías y sifones, the most important developments in the history of sino también al qanat , estructura compuesta de tú - hydraulic engineering (Wilson, 2008). neles y pozos que proveyó de agua a las tierras más e qanat spread to the Far East, Europe and the áridas del mundo y que, en opinión de Wilson, re - New World, receiving in México the name of Galería presenta uno de los desarrollos más importantes en la Filtrante (Filtering Gallery), about which Palerm historia de la ingeniería hidráulica (Wilson, 2008). Viqueira (2004) carried out a detailed study on its El qanat se extendió al Lejano Oriente, a Europa typology and distribution; however, the topic of y al Nuevo Mundo, recibiendo en México el nom - the Peruvian puquio remained pending. About this bre de Galería Filtrante, del cual Palerm Viqueira particular, Barnes and Fleming (1991) set out the (2004) realizó un detallado estudio sobre su tipología hypothesis of a probable Spanish origin for Nasca’s y distribución, quedando pendiente el tema del pu - puquio ; in contrast, Schreiber and Lancho (2003, quio peruano. Sobre este particular, Barnes y Fleming 2006) regarded them as a sub-product of the Nasca (1991) plantearon la hipótesis de un probable origen culture. Although the debate about the origin of español del puquio de Nasca; en cambio, Schreiber puquios is not settled yet 1, the contributions suggested y Lancho (2003, 2006) los vieron como un sub-pro - so far in this century allow us a better comprehension ducto de la cultura Nasca. Aunque el debate sobre el of this technique for irrigating extreme arid lands in origen de los puquios aún no concluye 1, los aportes Nasca. By extension, it also stimulated interest about planteados en lo que va del presente siglo nos permi - water management in the Andes of southern Perú, ten una mejor comprensión de esta técnica que irri - since the techniques used by the ancient Peruvian ga tierras de aridez extrema en Nasca. Por extensión, peoples in the coastal deserts, as well as in the Andean también despertó el interés por la gestión del agua en basins and highlands, materialize their knowledge los Andes del sur del Perú, en tanto que las técnicas about local geography and the resources available, usadas por los antiguos peruanos en los desiertos cos - and their correlation with a vision of the world that teros, así como en las cuencas y altiplanicies andinas, values underground water. materializan su conocimiento sobre la geografía local In order to gain access to the hydraulic techniques y los recursos disponibles y su correlación con una of ancient Perú, native center of culture, the cases visión del mundo que valora el agua subterránea. of Nasca, Machu Picchu and Moray are reviewed, Para acceder a las técnicas hidráulicas del anti - notable examples of Andean knowledge about water guo Perú, centro originario de cultura, se revisan los management. anks to the studies by scientists casos de Nasca, Machu Picchu y Moray, ejemplos and engineers, with the help of new non-invasive notables del conocimiento andino sobre el manejo techniques, a better understanding of the hydraulic del agua. Gracias a los estudios de cientícos e inge - systems from these cultures has been attained, nieros, con la ayuda de las nuevas técnicas no inva - which can help us in the international eort to face sivas, se ha podido tener una mejor comprensión de climate change. In this sense, the way in which water las técnicas hidráulicas de estas culturas que pueden management was approached is examined, both in ayudarnos en el esfuerzo internacional para enfren - the Nasca culture, located in one of the most arid tar el cambio climático. En tal sentido se examina deserts of the world, and in the Andes of southern cómo se enfrentó la gestión del agua tanto en la cul - Perú, near the city of Cusco, in areas with intense tura Nasca, ubicada en uno de los desiertos más ári - rains, dicult geography and scarce cultivation dos del mundo, como en los andes del sur del Perú, lands. e way in which water was obtained, stored cerca de la ciudad de Cusco, en áreas de intensas and distributed, is examined with special care, as well lluvias, difícil geografía y escasas tierras de cultivo. as the importance of underground water or spring Se examina, con especial cuidado, cómo se obtuvo, water. Also, the aim was to understand Perú’s current guardó y distribuyó el agua, y qué importancia tuvo potential with these resources. el agua subterránea o de manantial. Igualmente, se From the examination performed, it can be deseaba conocer el potencial actual del Perú sobre concluded that springs or underground water fed estos recursos. the puquios from the Nasca culture, as well as the 280 VOLUMEN 12, NÚMERO 3 PUQUIOS, QANATS Y MANANTIALES: GESTIÓN DEL AGUA EN EL PERÚ ANTIGUO Del examen realizado se puede concluir que los hydraulic works in Machu Picchu or the muyus in manantiales o las aguas subterráneas alimentaron los Moray.
Recommended publications
  • Climate, Agricultural Strategies, and Sustainability in the Precolumbian Andes Charles Ortloff [email protected]
    Andean Past Volume 9 Article 15 11-1-2009 Climate, Agricultural Strategies, and Sustainability in the Precolumbian Andes Charles Ortloff [email protected] Michael E. Moseley University of Florida, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/andean_past Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons, Natural Resource Economics Commons, Natural Resources Management and Policy Commons, Sustainability Commons, and the Water Resource Management Commons Recommended Citation Ortloff, Charles and Moseley, Michael E. (2009) "Climate, Agricultural Strategies, and Sustainability in the Precolumbian Andes," Andean Past: Vol. 9 , Article 15. Available at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/andean_past/vol9/iss1/15 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Andean Past by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CLIMATE, AGRICULTURAL STATEGIES, AND SUSTAINABILITY IN THE PRECOLUMBIAN ANDES CHARLES R. ORTLOFF University of Chicago and MICHAEL E. MOSELEY University of Florida INTRODUCTION allowed each society to design and manage complex water supply networks and to adapt Throughout ancient South America, mil- them as climate changed. While shifts to marine lions of hectares of abandoned farmland attest resources, pastoralism, and trade may have that much more terrain was cultivated in mitigated declines in agricultural production, precolumbian times than at present. For Peru damage to the sustainability of the main agricul- alone, the millions of hectares of abandoned tural system often led to societal changes and/or agricultural land show that in some regions 30 additional modifications to those systems.
    [Show full text]
  • Pscde3 - the Four Sides of the Inca Empire
    CUSCO LAMBAYEQUE Email: [email protected] Av. Manco Cápac 515 – Wanchaq Ca. M. M. Izaga 740 Of. 207 - Chiclayo www.chaskiventura.com T: 51+ 84 233952 T: 51 +74 221282 PSCDE3 - THE FOUR SIDES OF THE INCA EMPIRE SUMMARY DURATION AND SEASON 15 Days/ 14 Nights LOCATION Department of Arequipa, Puno, Cusco, Raqchi community ATRACTIONS Tourism: Archaeological, Ethno tourism, Gastronomic and landscapes. ATRACTIVOS Archaeological and Historical complexes: Machu Picchu, Tipón, Pisac, Pikillaqta, Ollantaytambo, Moray, Maras, Chinchero, Saqsayhuaman, Catedral, Qoricancha, Cusco city, Inca and pre-Inca archaeological complexes, Temple of Wiracocha, Arequipa and Puno. Living culture: traditional weaving techniques and weaving in the Communities of Chinchero, Sibayo, , Raqchi, Uros Museum: in Lima, Arequipa, Cusco. Natural areas: of Titicaca, highlands, Colca canyon, local fauna and flora. TYPE OF SERVICE Private GUIDE – TOUR LEADER English, French, or Spanish. Its presence is important because it allows to incorporate your journey in the thematic offered, getting closer to the economic, institutional, and historic culture and the ecosystems of the circuit for a better understanding. RESUME This circuit offers to get closer to the Andean culture and to understand its world view, its focus, its technologies, its mixture with the Hispanic culture, and the fact that it remains present in Indigenous Communities today. In this way, by bus, small boat, plane or walking, we will visit Archaeological and Historical Complexes, Communities, Museums & Natural Environments that will enable us to know the heart of the Inca Empire - the last heir of the Andean independent culture and predecessor of the mixed world of nowadays. CUSCO LAMBAYEQUE Email: [email protected] Av.
    [Show full text]
  • Acueductos De Nasca
    REPÚBLICA DEL PERÚ ACUEDUCTOS DE NASCA FORMULARIO DE PRESENTACIÓN LISTA INDICATIVA Lima, mayo 2019 Formulario de Presentación Lista Indicativa Anexo 2A FORMULARIO DE PRESENTACIÓN LISTA INDICATIVA ESTADO PARTE: Perú FECHA DE PRESENTACIÓN: Mayo 2019 Propuesta preparada por: Nombre: Correo Electrónico: Luis Jaime Castillo Butters – Ministro de Cultura [email protected] Dirección: Fax: Av. Javier Prado Este 2465 San Borja, Lima (511) 4769901 Institución: Teléfono: Ministerio de Cultura (511) 476 9933 Nombre del Bien: Acueductos de Nasca Estado, Provincia o Región: Perú, Región Ica, provincia de Nasca, distritos de Nasca y Vista Alegre Latitud y longitud, o coordenadas UTM: 506,740 E y 8´360,620 N (referencial ciudad de Nasca) DESCRIPCIÓN: Los Acueductos de Nasca se ubican en la provincia de Nasca, departamento de Ica, en la cuenca del río Grande, caracterizado por ser un sistema hidrográfico que nace únicamente en base a las precipitaciones que ocurren en las montañas de la parte alta de la cuenca, en la estribaciones de los Andes centrales y que dan origen a cursos de agua de características intermitentes, que suelen durar solamente entre tres y cuatro meses cada año (diciembre a marzo). Los acueductos se ubican en la parte baja de la cuenca; se caracteriza por ser una faja desértica muy seca, mayormente plana si bien existen algunos sectores con relieves montañosos complejos; el desierto es surcado por varios ríos, pero contrariamente a la abundancia de agua, se trata de cauces con un régimen irregular, donde la mayor parte del año el agua es escasa y en muchos casos se produce un estiaje total a veces muy prolongado.
    [Show full text]
  • Nazca Culture Azca Flourished in the Ica and Rio Grande De Nazca River Valleys of Southern Peru, Nin an Extremely Arid Coastal Zone Just West of the Andes
    Nazca Culture azca flourished in the Ica and Rio Grande de Nazca river valleys of southern Peru, Nin an extremely arid coastal zone just west of the Andes. Nazca chronology is generally broken into four main periods: 1) Proto-Nazca or Nazca 1, from the decline of Paracas culture in the second century BCE until about 0 CE; 2) Early Nazca (or Nazca 2–4), from ca. 0 CE to 450 CE; 3) A transitional Nazca 5 from 450–550 CE; and 4) Late Nazca (phases 6–7), from about 550–750 CE. Nazca 5 witnesses the beginning of environmental changes thought to be associated with the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), cycles of warm and cold water that interrupt the cold, low-salinity Humboldt Current that flows along the Peruvian coast. A 2009 study in Latin American Antiquity suggests that the Nazca may have contributed to this environmental collapse by clearing the land of huarango trees (Prosopis pallida, a kind of mesquite) which played a crucial role in preventing erosion. While best known for their pottery and the Nazca lines (geoglyphs created in the surrounding desert), perhaps their greatest achievement was the construction of extensive puquios, or underground aqueducts channeling water from aquifers, similar in purpose and construction to the qanats of the ancient Middle East. Through the use of puquios the ancient Nazca made parts of the desert bloom; many Nazca puquios remain in use today. Some scholars long doubted that the puquios were made by the Nazca, but in 1995 chronometric dates using accelerator mass spectrometry confirmed dates in the sixth century CE and earlier.
    [Show full text]
  • Nasca Culture Integration and Complexity: a Perspective from the Site of La Tiza
    Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 35 (2014) 234–247 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Journal of Anthropological Archaeology journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jaa Nasca culture integration and complexity: A perspective from the site of La Tiza Christina A. Conlee Texas State University, Department of Anthropology, 601 University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666, USA article info abstract Article history: The Nasca culture (AD 1-650) located on the south coast of Peru has been interpreted in many ways since Received 21 January 2014 it was first investigated by Max Uhle in 1901. Scholars have described it as a middlerange society, Revision received 16 June 2014 heterarchy, simple chiefdom, confederacy, paramount chiefdom, theocracy, state, and empire. This paper explores past interpretations of Nasca and presents data from the site of La Tiza in the southern Nasca drainage. The evidence from La Tiza indicates that population was larger and settlements were more Keywords: variable than has previously been proposed for southern Nasca. In addition, there are indications of a Nasca culture greater degree of social differentiation and ritual activities not previously identified at other sites in Integration the area. This has implications for the overall integration and complexity of the Nasca culture. Complexity Inequality Ó 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Peru Early Intermediate Period 1. Introduction Silverman and Proulx, 2002; Vaughn, 2009). The last twenty years have seen a proliferation of research on the Nasca culture and there Since it was first investigated by Max Uhle in 1901, the Nasca is now a great deal of new data that can be used to better assess the culture of the Early Intermediate Period (AD 1-650) has been inter- nature of this ancient society.
    [Show full text]
  • El Valle Del Sondondo, Paisaje Cultural Vivo
    El Valle del Sondondo, Paisaje Cultural Vivo © Ministerio de Cultura © Dirección de Paisaje Cultural 2017 Fuente: ©CTB/PRODERN/Enrique Castro Mendivil SALVADOR DEL SOLAR LABARTHE Ministro de Cultura JORGE ARRUNÁTEGUI GADEA Viceministro de Patrimonio Cultural e Industrias Culturales EDWIN BENAVENTE GARCÍA Dirección General de Patrimonio Cultural LENKA FIGUEROA AÑORGA Dirección de Paisaje Cultural INVESTIGACIÓN: Josué Carlos Gonzales Solórzano Frank David Huamaní Paliza Lila Magaly Tantaleán Valiente Anderson Chamorro García REDACCIÓN: Josué Carlos Gonzales Solórzano Frank David Huamaní Paliza EDICIÓN Frank David Huamaní Paliza CARTOGRAFÍA: Leyla Mabel Sotelo Manrique María Giovanna Chamorro Mott CORRECCIÓN DE TEXTOS: Frank David Huamaní Paliza Josué Carlos Gonzales Solórzano DISEÑO Y DIAGRAMACIÓN: Johan Orreaga Muñoz FOTOGRAFÍA: Ministerio de Cultura - Dirección de Paisaje Cultural FOTO CARÁTULA: ©CTB/PRODERN/Enrique Castro Mendivil Hecho el depósito legal en la Biblioteca Nacional del Perú Nº 2017-09885 ISBN: 978-612-4126-64-2 © Dirección de Paisaje Cultural, 2016 Sede Central: Av. Javier Prado Este 2465, San Borja, Lima Central telefónica: 0051 - 01 - 3215554 Email: [email protected] Primera edición, Junio 2016 Primera reimpresión, setiembre 2017 Tiraje: 1000 ejemplares Impreso en Perú Se terminó de imprimir en setiembre de 2017 en: MAGRAF E.I.R.L. Calle Miguel Checa , dpto B, urb. Santa Catalina La Victoria, Lima Índice Índice Índice de tablas Índice de gráficos Tabla 01. Hectáreas de andenerías en Sondondo 27 Grafico 01. Uso vertical del territorio (valle y puna) en el Valle del Sondondo 24 Tabla 02. Número y longitud de canales en el Valle de Sondondo 29 Grafico 02. Uso y manejo de la puna en las altiplanicies de Cabana 35 Tabla 03.
    [Show full text]
  • The Big Picture Part 1 Nazca (Nasca) Nazca Is a City and System of Valleys on the Southern Coast of Peru
    The Big Picture Part 1 Nazca (Nasca) Nazca is a city and system of valleys on the southern coast of Peru. It is also the name of the largest existing town in the Nazca Province. The Nazca culture flourished in the area between 100 BCE and 800 CE. https://www.ancient.eu/Nazca_Civilizat ion/ Cahauchi Temple Complex Irrigation https://www.youtube.co m/watch?v=MuluiE26rEw Puquios are an ancient system of subterranean aqueducts built by both the Paracas and Nasca cultures in the region of present-day Nazca, Peru. The former group occupied the area roughly between 800 BCE and 200 BCE, and the Nasca from 200 BCE to 650 CE near the city of Nazca, Peru. Of 36 known puquios in Peru, most still function and are relied upon to bring fresh water into the desert. Nazca Textiles The Nazca are also known for their technically complex textiles. The textiles were most likely woven by women at habitation sites from spun cotton and wool. The dry desert has preserved the textiles of both the Nazca and Paracas cultures. Nazca Pottery The use of pre-fire slip painting to produce certain colors. Major pottery shapes include double-spout bottles, bowls, cups, vases, effigy forms, and mythical creatures. Archaeologists have excavated highly valued polychrome pottery among all classes of Nazca society, illustrating that it was not just the elite that had access to them. Commoners were able to obtain these goods through feasting and pilgrimages to Cahuachi. Nazca Lines Nazca Geoglyphs are among the world’s largest drawings. The hummingbird measures over 300 feet in length.
    [Show full text]
  • Lines, Dots and Spirals on Peruvian Land
    Lines, dots and spirals on Peruvian land Amelia Carolina Sparavigna Dipartimento di Fisica, Politecnico di Torino, Torino, Italy The most famous geoglyphs of Peru are the “Nazca Lines”. Considered as one of the mysteries of the ancient world, they have been included among the UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Located in a large region between the towns of Nazca and Palpa, these lines create shapes of animals ranging in size up to 300 m. The archaeological site is under investigation with remote science technologies. Peru has several dry regions hosting unique remains of the ancient civilizations flourished in this country before the arrival of Spanish people. These remains are geoglyphs, which are huge drawings created on the ground. On the dry pampas (pampa is a Quechua word meaning "plain"), the drawings were made by removing the uppermost surface, exposing the underlying ground which has a different color. This technique produces a “negative” geoglyph. A “positive” geoglyphs is instead created by the arrangement of stones, gravel or earth. Peru has some positive geoglyphs near the Titicaca Lake, formed by earthworks used for cultivation [1]. Geoglyphs have been also found in some deforested regions of Amazonia [2]. The most famous negative geoglyphs of Peru are the “Nazca Lines”. These Lines are considered as one of the mysteries of the ancient world and many interpretations have been proposed on their function. Included among the UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1994, the Lines are located in the Nazca Desert, a large region between the towns of Nazca and Palpa. The figures range in size up to 300 m across, such as in Fig.1, where we can see a Frigatebird having a very long beak: because of their size, they can better recognize from the air or in satellite imagery.
    [Show full text]
  • Archaeobotanical Analysis from the Lower Ica Valley, Peru Anita G
    Andean Past Volume 7 Article 11 2005 Gardens in the Desert: Archaeobotanical Analysis from the Lower Ica Valley, Peru Anita G. Cook The Catholic University of America, [email protected] Nancy Parrish U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/andean_past Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons Recommended Citation Cook, Anita G. and Parrish, Nancy (2005) "Gardens in the Desert: Archaeobotanical Analysis from the Lower Ica Valley, Peru," Andean Past: Vol. 7 , Article 11. Available at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/andean_past/vol7/iss1/11 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Andean Past by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. GARDENS IN THE DESERT: ARCHAEOBOTANICAL ANALYSIS FROM THE LOWER ICA VALLEY, PERU ANITA G. COOK The Catholic University of America NANCY PARRISH U.S. Army Corps of Engineers INTRODUCTION A drought apparently affected much of the highlands in the late sixth century A.D. Can this Can the nature and type of Huari imperial climatic perturbation explain settlement pattern presence on the south coast of Peru be documented shifts on the coast and the appearance of early Huari as Lumbreras (1960) and Menzel (1964) suggested settlements in the Ica Valley? Though we have yet many years ago? These scholars considered Huari to to determine which model best fits the complex be an expansive state that grew rapidly into an empire relations between Ayacucho and Ica, we offer (A.D.
    [Show full text]
  • New Chronometric Dates for the Puquios of Nasca, Peru Author(S): Persis B
    Society for American Archaeology New Chronometric Dates for the Puquios of Nasca, Peru Author(s): Persis B. Clarkson and Ronald I. Dorn Source: Latin American Antiquity, Vol. 6, No. 1 (Mar., 1995), pp. 56-69 Published by: Society for American Archaeology Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/971600 Accessed: 15/12/2010 12:49 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=sam. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Society for American Archaeology is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Latin American Antiquity. http://www.jstor.org NEW CHRONOMETRICDATES FOR THE PUQUIOS OF NASCA, PERU PersisB.
    [Show full text]
  • Puquios, Qanats Y Manantiales: Gestión Del Agua En El Perú Antiguo
    PUQUIOS, QANATS Y MANANTIALES: GESTIÓN DEL AGUA EN EL PERÚ ANTIGUO PUQUIOS, QANATS AND SPRINGS: WATER MANAGENT IN ANCIENT PERÚ Luis A. Ponce-Vega Universidad Nacional Federico Villareal. Lima, Perú. ([email protected]) RESUMEN ABSTRACT En esta era marcada por el cambio climático, la desertifica- In this era marked by climate change, desertification and ción y el estrés hídrico se precisan como soluciones alternati- water stress, low-cost and high-efficiency alternative solutions vas de bajo costo y alta efectividad para proporcionar agua a are required to provide low-income rural communities with las comunidades rurales de bajos ingresos, a fin de satisfacer water, in order to satisfy their agricultural and domestic sus necesidades agrícolas y domésticas en armonía con su rea- needs in harmony with their geographic reality. This study lidad geográfica. La presente obra examina cómo las socieda- examines how agrarian societies of the Nasca culture faced des agrarias de la cultura Nasca enfrentaron estos desafíos en these challenges in one of the most arid deserts in the world, uno de los desiertos más áridos del mundo, así como en los and in the Andes of southern Perú, near the city of Cusco, andes del sur peruano, cerca de la ciudad de Cusco, en áreas in areas with intense rains, difficult geography and scarce de intensas lluvias, difícil geografía y escasas tierras de culti- cultivation lands. The objective is to understand, specifically, vo. Se desea conocer, específicamente, cómo se obtuvo, guar- how water was obtained, stored and distributed, and what dó y distribuyó el agua y qué importancia tuvo el uso del agua importance the use of underground and spring water had; subterránea y la de manantiales; se desea saber, igualmente, el likewise, the aim is to understand Perú’s potential in terms potencial del Perú en cuanto a aguas subterráneas.
    [Show full text]
  • Satellite SAR Remote Sensing in Nasca
    Satellite SAR Remote Sensing in Nasca Francesca Cigna and Deodato Tapete F. Cigna · D. Tapete Natural Environment Research Council, British Geological Survey Keyworth, Nottingham, United Kingdom e-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] Abstract In 2012, a research project initiated at the British Geological Survey used space-borne Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery to investigate the environmental changes affecting the drainage basin of Rio Grande and its tributaries, in Southern Peru. Our research has provided evidence of the effects due to natural and anthropogenic processes on the cultural landscape where the Nasca Civilization flourished centuries ago. This chapter provides an overview of the new insights brought by satellite SAR technology to the understanding of land use and changes in the fertile river valleys, condition of local water resources, and archaeological heritage. Impacts of this research are discussed in relation to the rejuvenation of the water supply system and preservation of cultural identity. 21.1 SAR in Nasca As widely described in previous chapters of this book, the catchment area of Rio Grande in Southern Peru was the home of the Nasca Civilization (Fig. 21.1), with evidence of human occupation since 2,000 BC, that was concentrated mostly along its tributaries Rio Ingenio, Rio Nazca, and Rio Taruga. After several millennia, local communities still reside and cultivate the alluvial valleys, and their subsistence depends on the available soil and water resources. A long- standing connection therefore exists between the environment and local population, and exposure to climate and natural processes needs to be accounted for in the perspective of maintaining this equilibrium.
    [Show full text]