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Skeletons of more than 100 children found sacrificed at ritual site in Peru

'We had not seen anything like this before'

Josh Gabbatiss
Science Correspondent
Wednesday 06 March 2019 15:41 EST
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The bones of over 100 children were found at a site in Peru, some with evidence of having their hearts ritualistically removed
The bones of over 100 children were found at a site in Peru, some with evidence of having their hearts ritualistically removed (John Verano)

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A mass sacrifice site containing the remains of more than 100 children has been unearthed in Peru.

Dating back to the 15th century, archaeologists have identified the remains as part of the largest mass sacrifice of its kind ever seen in the Americas.

The bodies, which belonged to children as young as five, bore evidence of having their hearts ritualistically removed.

Alongside the bones of 140 children were those belonging to more than 200 young llamas, all spread across an area spanning around 700 square metres.

The Huanchaquito-Las Llamas site was part of the Chimu state, which was the dominant society along the coast of Peru during the 15th century.

These bodies were unearthed over the course of five years, and scientists have dated them to the height of the Chimu culture in 1450.

A thick layer of mud covering the remains indicated that the killing came after a large rain storm or flood, which may have been what inspired these ancient Peruvians to perform such a dramatic act.

Such human sacrifices are known from a variety of cultures, and are normally performed as part of funeral or otherwise spiritual rituals, but the Chimu discovery was unprecedented.

“This archaeological discovery was a surprise to all of us – we had not seen anything like this before,” said Dr John Verano, an anthropologist at Tulane University and one of the study’s authors.

“There was no suggestion from ethno-historic sources or historic accounts of child or camelid sacrifices being made on such a scale in northern coastal Peru."

As the team removed the bones from the sediment, they realised there were cut marks along the children’s sternums and displaced ribs, suggesting they had their chests cut open to have organs removed.

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The authors of the study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, noted the sacrifice of so many would have been an enormous investment of resources for this ancient culture and must therefore have had enormous significance.

“We were fortunate to be able to completely excavate the site and to have a multidisciplinary field and laboratory team to do the excavation and preliminary analysis of the material,” said Dr Verano.

“This site opens a new chapter on the practice of child sacrifice in the ancient world.”

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