Abstract

Here we report the results of excavation and interdisciplinary study of the largest child and camelid sacrifice known from the New World. Stratigraphy, associated artifacts, and radiocarbon dating indicate that it was a single mass killing of more than 140 children and over 200 camelids directed by the Chimú state, c. AD 1450. Preliminary DNA analysis indicates that both boys and girls were chosen for sacrifice. Variability in forms of cranial modification (head shaping) and stable isotope analysis of carbon and nitrogen suggest that the children were a heterogeneous sample drawn from multiple regions and ethnic groups throughout the Chimú state. The Huanchaquito-Las Llamas mass sacrifice opens a new window on a previously unknown sacrificial ritual from fifteenth century northern coastal Peru. While the motivation for such a massive sacrifice is a subject for further research, there is archaeological evidence that it was associated with a climatic event (heavy rainfall and flooding) that could have impacted the economic, political and ideological stability of one of the most powerful states in the New World during the fifteenth century A.D.

Highlights

  • Human and animal sacrifices were made by various societies in ancient world

  • The archaeological materials described in this paper are currently housed at the deposits of the Chan Chan Museum and Huaca El Dragon storage facilities, both managed by the Ministry of Culture in Trujillo (Peru)

  • The archaeological context and osteological analysis of the human and camelid remains at Huanchaquito document a mass sacrifice of children and camelids on a scale unlike any seen previously in Andean South America

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Summary

Introduction

Human and animal sacrifices were made by various societies in ancient world. In Prehispanic Peru, individuals were killed and placed in tombs to accompany important persons in the afterlife, buried as dedicatory offerings in monumental architecture, and sacrificed in various contexts as gifts to the gods [1,2,3,4]. Captives were taken in small-scale raiding and organized warfare, and killed in both formal rituals and impromptu reprisals [5,6,7]. Sacrifice of children and camelids in Ancient Andes. 0003-BCDiv: Elise Dufour Agence Nationale de la Recherche: ANR-11-IDEX-0004-02: Elise Dufour Roger Thayer Stone Center for Latin American Studies, Tulane University: 2014: John W. Carol Lavin Bernick Faculty Grant Program (Tulane University).: 2015-2016: John W.

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