Woman’s 4,500-Year-Old Burial Unearthed in Peru

News April 21, 2016

(Culture Ministry of Peru)
SHARE:
Peru Aspero burial
(Culture Ministry of Peru)

LIMA, PERU—ANDINA News Service reports that archaeologist Ruth Shady and her team have unearthed the grave of a high-status woman at Áspero, an archaeological site located on the Peruvian coast, near the site of the large ancient city of Caral. The woman is estimated to have been 40 years old at the time of death, some 4,500 years ago. She had been buried with a pot containing traces of vegetables and seeds, a necklace made of shell beads, a pendant made from a Spondylus shell, and four tupus, or bone broaches featuring bird and monkey motifs. “The find shows evidence of gender equality, that is, both women and men were able to play leading roles and attain high social status more than 1,000 years ago,” Shady said. To read about another prehistoric site in Peru, go to "An Overlooked Inca Wonder."

  • Features March/April 2016

    France’s Roman Heritage

    Magnificent wall paintings discovered in present-day Arles speak to a previously unknown history

    Read Article
    (Copyright Remi Benali INRAP, musée départemental Arles antique)
  • Features March/April 2016

    Recovering Hidden Texts

    At the world’s oldest monastery, new technology is making long-lost manuscripts available to anyone with an Internet connection

    Read Article
    St. Catherine's Monastery
    Copyright St. Catherine's Monastery
  • Letter from Guatemala March/April 2016

    Maya Metropolis

    Beneath Guatemala’s modern capital lies the record of the rise and fall of an ancient city

    Read Article
    (Roger Atwood)
  • Artifacts March/April 2016

    Egyptian Ostracon

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Nigel Strudwick/Cambridge Theban Mission)