News Release

Ritual offerings, sacrifice in ancient Tiwanaku state formation

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Modern Underwater Offering

image: This is a modern underwater offering (Lake Titicaca, Bolivia). view more 

Credit: Teddy Seguin (photographer)

A study uncovers archaeological evidence that underscores the role of religious rituals, including animal sacrifice, in state formation in Lake Titicaca basin. Religion is thought to have promoted cooperation between groups and consolidated the ancient Tiwanaku state between 500 and 1100 CE in Lake Titicaca basin in southcentral Andes. However, a dearth of evidence of rituals has hampered understanding of religion's role in reinforcing a moral code of behavior that supported state formation in the region. In 2013, Christophe Delaere, José Capriles, and Charles Stanish conducted underwater excavations in Khoa Reef in an archipelago on Bolivia's Island of the Sun in Titicaca basin, extending previous excavations. The authors surfaced Tiwanaku puma incense burners, metal ornaments, including gold medallions engraved with the Tiwanaku ray-faced deity, and semiprecious stone artifacts, including a turquoise stone pendant, a lapis-lazuli puma figurine, and green glacier moraine stones. Animal bones recovered from the submerged deposits were traced to teals, cormorants, frogs, killifish, and catfish, and, unexpectedly, camelids. Osteometric analysis identified the camelid bones as domesticated llamas, and the completeness of the assemblage suggested at least one infant and three juvenile llamas were likely sacrificed. Radiocarbon dating traced the offerings to 794-964 CE, consistent with expansion of the Tiwanaku state. Religious iconography on the ornaments as well as the sumptuary gold, shell, and lapidary finds signaling ceremonial disposal of wealth hinted at the rituals' relevance to state formation. Together, the evidence suggests that Khoa, situated at a vantage in the middle of the lake, was a hub for religious rituals officiated by an elite group. Such rituals, marked by worship of the ray-faced deity, animal sacrifice, and display of wealth, may have consolidated power and served as a binding sinew for the Tiwanaku body politic, according to the authors.

Article #18-20749: "Underwater ritual offerings in the Island of the Sun and the formation of the Tiwanaku state," by Christophe Delaere, José Capriles, and Charles Stanish

MEDIA CONTACT: Charles Stanish, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL; tel: 310-601-0310; e-mail: <stanish@usf.edu>; Christophe Delaere, University of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM; e-mail: delaerechristophe@gmail.com

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