About: Huaca is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 115 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1373 citations. The topic is also known as: wak'a.
TL;DR: The political structure of the pre-Columbian Andes took form primarily around a system of sacred ancestral relics and origin points known generically as huacas, and each huaca defined a level of political organization that might nest into units of a higher order or subdivide into smaller groupings as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: There is a strange and unacknowledged paradox in the historiography of the Incas. On the one hand, few would deny that theirs was a typically theocratic archaic state, a divine kingship in which the Inca was thought to.be the son of the Sun. On the other hand, the standard descriptions of Inca political structure barely mention religion and seem to assume a formal separation between state and cult.1 I believe that these secularizing accounts are misguided and will show in this essay that the political structure of the pre-Columbian Andes took form primarily around a system of sacred ancestral relics and origin points known generically as huacas. Each huaca defined a level of political organization that might nest into units of a higher order or subdivide into smaller groupings. Collectively they formed a segmentary hierarchy that transcended the boundaries of local ethnic polities and provided the basis for empires like that of the Incas. However, these huacas were also the focus of local kinship relations and agrarian fertility rituals. The political structure that they articulated therefore had a built-in concern for the metaphysical reproduction of human, animal, and plant life. Political power in the pre-Columbian Andes was particularly bound up with attempts to control the flow of water across the frontier of life and death, resulting in no clear distinction between ritual and administration.
TL;DR: In this article, archeological excavations in deep pre-mound levels at Huaca Prieta in northern Peru have yielded new evidence of late Pleistocene cultural deposits that shed insights into the early human occupation of the Pacific coast of South America.
TL;DR: A study of a specific insect fauna from a pre-Columbian Moche grave, on the north coast of Peru, reveals burial practices, notably an estimation of the corpse's exposure time prior to burial, and compares New and Old World beliefs concerning flies and death.
TL;DR: The partition of biological distances among tombs at Huaca Loro supports the archaeological evidence that the tombs represent a planned elite cemetery.
Abstract: Within and between tombs at the 1,000-year-old site of Huaca Loro on north coastal Peru, interment characteristics vary to an intriguing degree. Following and elaborating upon prior intracemetery studies, biological relatedness among associated burial groupings was assessed using 23 dental characters (assuming familial allele segregation) for 29 individuals. Biological patterning was based on multivariate distance between individuals using all traits, rather than the previously widespread reliance upon univariate comparison of each trait separately within samples. This multivariate approach did seem more informative. Statistically significant variation of biological similarities and dissimilarities corresponded to spatial groupings and also to various specific archaeological indications of the cohesiveness, or lack thereof, of interment pattern. The partition of biological distances among tombs at Huaca Loro supports the archaeological evidence that the tombs represent a planned elite cemetery.
TL;DR: In this paper, a skeleton from a pre-Columbian skeleton from the Moche grave at Huacadela in Peru has been found due to underground termite activity, and information related to the occasional osteophagous diet of termites on mammal and human remains is reviewed and detailed.
Abstract: CNRS, UMR 8096 ‘‘Arche ´ologie des Ameriques’’, 92023 Nanterre Cedex, FranceABSTRACT AhumanskeletonfromaMochegraveatHuacadelaLuna,Trujillo,Peru,showsevidenceoftaphonomicbonemodification due to subterranean termite activity. Information related to the occasional osteophagous diet oftermites on mammal and human remains is reviewed and detailed. Copyright 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Key words: funeral archaeoentomology; taphonomy; osteophagy; isoptera; termite; Pre-Columbian America;Moche civilisation