The
Lines of Nazca Peru
A
giant monkey biomorph on the Nasca desert plain. (©
Jarnogz & Dreamstime.com)
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In the Peruvian Desert, about 200 miles south of
Lima, there lies a plain between the Inca and Nazca (sometimes
also spelled Nasca) Valleys. Across this plain, in an area
measuring 37 miles long and 1-mile wide, is an assortment of perfectly-straight
lines, many running parallel, others intersecting, forming a grand
geometric form. In and around the lines there are also trapezoidal
zones, strange symbols, and pictures of birds and beasts all etched
on a giant scale that can only be appreciated from the sky.
The figures come in two types: biomorphs and geoglyphs.
The biomorphs are some 70 animal and plant figures that include
a spider, hummingbird, monkey and a 1,000-foot-long pelican. The
biomorphs are grouped together in one area on the plain. Some
archaeologists believe they were constructed around 200 BC, about
500 years before the geoglyphs.
There are about 900 geoglyphs on the plain. Geoglyphs
are geometric forms that include straight lines, triangles, spirals,
circles and trapezoids. They are enormous in size. The longest
straight line goes nine miles across the plain.
A
Nasca trapezoid, looking like a runway, seems to invite
the observation aircraft to land. (Photo
courtesy of Michael J. Way. Copyright Michael J. Way)
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Discovery
and Meaning
Though discovered by Peruvian archaeologist Toribio
Mejia Xesspe who spotted them while hiking through the surrounding
foothills in 1927, the forms are so difficult to see from the
ground that they were not widely known until the 1930's when aircraft
spotted them while surveying for water. The plain, crisscrossed,
by these giant lines with many forming rectangles, has a striking
resemblance to a modern airport. The Swiss writer, Erich
von Daniken, even suggested they had been built for the convenience
of ancient visitors from space to land their ships. As tempting
as it might be to subscribe to this theory, the desert floor at
Nazca is soft earth and loose stone, not tarmac, and would not
support the landing wheels of either an aircraft or a flying saucer.
So why are the lines there? The American explorer
Paul Kosok, who made his first visit to Nazca in the 1940s, suggested
that the lines were astronomically significant and that the plain
acted as a giant observatory. He called them "the largest astronomy
book in the world." Gerald Hawkins, an American astronomer, tested
this theory in 1968 by feeding the position of a sample of lines
into a computer and having a program calculate how many lines
coincided with an important astronomical event. Hawkins showed
the number of lines that were astronomically significant were
only about the same number that would be the result of pure chance.
This makes it seem unlikely Nazca is an observatory.
The
Nasca lines were created by clearing the darkened pampa
stones to either side and exposing the lighter sand underneath.
(Photo
courtesy of Michael J. Way. Copyright Michael J. Way)
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Perhaps the best theory for the lines and symbols belongs to
Tony Morrison, the English explorer. By researching the old
folk ways of the people of the Andes mountains, Morrison discovered
a tradition of wayside shrines linked by straight pathways.
The faithful would move from shrine to shrine praying and meditating.
Often the shrine was as simple as a small pile of stones. Morrison
suggests that the lines at Nazca were similar in purpose and
on a vast scale. The symbols may have also served as special
enclosures for religious ceremonies.
Construction of
the Lines
How were they built? The lines were apparently made
by brushing away the reddish, iron oxide covered pebbles that
compose the desert surface and uncovering the white colored sand
underneath. In most places wind, rain and erosion would quickly
remove all traces of this within a few years. At Nazca, though,
the lines have been preserved because it is such a windless, dry
and isolated location.
A writer by the name of Jim Woodman believes that
the lines and figures could not have been made without somebody
in the air to direct the operations. "You simply can't see anything
from ground level," states Woodman. "You can't appreciate any
of it from anywhere except from above. You can't tell me the Nazca
builders would have gone to the monumental efforts they did without
ever being able to see it."
Woodman has proposed that ancient hot-air balloons
were used to get an aerial view of the construction. To prove
his hypothesis, Woodman constructed a balloon using materials
that would have been available to the Nazca people. He was able
to conduct a successful flight, though it only lasted two minutes.
A
killer whale can plainly be seen in this biomorph.(©
Jarnogz & Dreamstime.com)
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Most researchers are extremely skeptical of Woodman's
conclusions, however, as they find little evidence in the remains
left by the Nazca of any balloon construction or operation.
It is more likely that the Nazca people used simple
surveying techniques in their work. Straight lines can be made
easily for great distances with simple tools. Two wooden stakes
placed as a straight line would be used to guide the placement
of a third stake along the line. One person would sight along
the first two stakes and instruct a second person in the placement
of the new stake. This could be repeated as many times as needed
to make an almost perfectly-straight line miles in length. Evidence
that the line makers used this technique exists in the form of
the remains of a few stakes found at the ends of some of the lines.
The symbols were probably made by drawing the desired
figure at some reasonable size, then using a grid system to divide
it up. The symbol could then be redrawn at full scale by recreating
the grid on the ground and working on each individual square one
at a time.
Related
to Water?
Recently two researchers, David Johnson and Steve
Mabee, have advanced a theory that the geoglyphs may be related
to water. The Nazca plain is one of the driest places on Earth,
getting less than one inch of rain a year. Johnson, while looking
for sources of water in the region, noticed that ancient aqueducts,
called puquios, seemed to be connected with some of the lines.
Johnson thinks that the shapes may be a giant map of the underground
water sources traced on the land. Mabee is working to gather evidence
that might confirm this theory.
This
figure appears to be a giant spider. (©
Jarnogz & Dreamstime.com)
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Other scientists are more skeptical, but admit that
in a region where finding water was vital to survival, there might
well be some connection between the ceremonial purpose of the
lines and water. Johan Reinhard, a cultural anthropologist with
the National Geographic Society, found that villagers in Bolivia
walk along a straight pathway to shrines while praying and dancing
for rain. Something similar may have been done at the ancient
Nazca lines.
Human
Sacrifice
A recently discovered headless body suggests that
human sacrifice was used by the Nazca people in religion ceremonies.
"Human sacrifice and decapitation were part of powerful rituals
that would have allayed fears by invoking the ancestors to ensure
fertility and the continuation of Nasca society," wrote Christina
Conlee of Texas State University in an article in Current Anthropology.
"The decapitation of the La Tiza individual appears to have been
part of a ritual associated with ensuring agricultural fertility
and the continuation of life and rebirth of the community." The
body is one of eight found in the Nazca area, buried seated with
no head. A ceramic jar painted with an image of a head was found
next to the remains. The head on the jar has a tree with eyes
growing out of it, making it seem likely that the sacrifice was
part of a fertility ceremony.
A
giant bird biomorph on the Nasca desert plain. (©
Jarnogz & Dreamstime.com)
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What was done with the heads of the victims? The
Nazca were known to collect "Trophy Heads." The Nazca removed
the brain and soft tissue from the skulls, sewed the lips closed
with cactus spines and drilled a hole through the forehead to
accommodate a loop of woven rope. The heads were then hung on
the ropes for display. Originally these were considered to be
war trophies collected from distant tribes, but recent DNA analysis
shows that the heads came from the Nazca population itself, suggesting
that the motive was religious in nature.
Other
South American Lines and Figures
The lines at Nazca aren't the only landscape figures
South America boasts. About 850 miles south of the plain is the
largest human figure in the world laid out upon the side of Solitary
Mountain in Chile. The Giant of Atacama stands 393 feet high and
is surrounded by lines similar to those at Nazca.
Along the Pacific Coast in the foothills of the
Andes Mountains is etched a figure resembling a giant candelabrum.
Further south, Sierra Pintada, which means "the painted mountain"
in Spanish, is covered with vast pictures including spirals, circles,
warriors and a condor. Archaeologists speculate that these figures,
clearly visible from the ground, served as guideposts for Inca
traders.
The
Giant of Atacama stands 393 feet high and is surrounded
by lines similar to those at Nazca (Licensed
through Creative Commons courtesy of Eimlio)
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