A long-buried group of enclosures and agricultural terraces have been discovered at an archaeological park in the southern Peruvian region of Cuzco, officials said Wednesday.
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Undated photo shows workers at an archaeological site, in Chinchero, Cuzco region, Peru [Credit: EPA-EFE/Peru's Ministry of Culture] |
The project head, archaeologist Felix Vilca, said the farming terraces and enclosures had been buried due to the construction of homes and an archaeological museum in Chinchero, a town 28 kilometers (17 miles) from the colonial city of Cuzco.
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Undated photo shows workers at an archaeological site, in Chinchero, Cuzco region, Peru [Credit: EPA-EFE/Peru's Ministry of Culture] |
The work encompassed more than 200 linear meters of Inca walls that form "part of the stair-step like terraces rising to the top, where the Chinchero site museum is located," the archaeologist added.
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Undated photo shows workers at an archaeological site, in Chinchero, Cuzco region, Peru [Credit: EPA-EFE/Peru's Ministry of Culture] |
At terrace No. 2, excavators found on one side part of a multi-section enclosure and evidence of another wall pointing northward, as well as another enclosure with similar characteristics on the opposite side.
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Undated photo shows workers at an archaeological site, in Chinchero, Cuzco region, Peru [Credit: EPA-EFE/Peru's Ministry of Culture] |
Evidence of a stone floor was found at one of those enclosures, indicating it dates from the colonial or republican period.
Source: EPA-EFE [January 26, 2018]