A 500-Year-Old Funerary Bundle And Pottery Probably Belonging To Ychsma Culture – Unearthed Near Lima, Peru

Archaeologists unearthed a 500-year-old funerary bundle and pottery during work on a natural gas line near Lima’s central coastline.

The bundle, wrapped in mats and tied with ropes arranged in a geometric pattern, is thought to belong to the Ychsma culture.

This pre-Inca indigenous and well-organized society was later absorbed by the Inca Empire and reorganized as a wanami (province). For the Inca, it was known as Pachakamaq (Pachacamac), rather than its original name of Ishma.

The Kingdom was located south of Lima, Peru in the Lurin River valley and later spread north into the Rimac River valley. The Ishma culture was formed around 1100 AD following the breakup of the Wari Empire. Ishma’s autonomy lasted until around 1469 when they were absorbed into the Incan Empire.

The inhabitants of Ishma had a high standard of living (despite occupying a desert. They had multiple irrigation channels as far as the river waters could reach. Their vast orchard and forests flourished.

A pre-Hispanic tomb

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