MOMMY IS UP TO 1,200 YEARS OLD

MOMMY IS UP TO 1,200 YEARS OLD
MOMMY IS UP TO 1,200 YEARS OLD

Peruvian archaeologists found a pre-Inca mummy between 1,200 and 800 years old surprisingly tied with rope, while excavating in a thousand-year-old urban mud complex on the outskirts of Lima.

The remains most likely belong to a male person, who would be between 18 and 22 years old at the time of her death and whose face is covered by his hands.

The discovery occurred inside a burial chamber about three meters long and at a depth of 1.40 meters at the Cajamarquilla archaeological site, east of Lima.

"We have achieved the discovery of a mummy that was located inside a funerary structure with an underground conical shape and when seeing the characteristics it was a mummy that was tied with ropes," archaeologist Pieter Van Dalen told, responsible for the Cajamarquilla project.

"It is a peculiar and unique feature of this funerary context," said Van Dalen of the find in this excavation.

"The mummy would have been buried between 800 to 1200 AD," he said.

On one side of the mummy was the skeleton of an Andean guinea pig (guinea pig) and what appears to be a dog, according to researchers at the University of San Marcos.

The remains of corn and other vegetables were also discovered in the burial chamber.

Cajamarquilla "was an urban center where multiple functions were developed, it has a great variety of sectors, where there are administrative, domestic and residential sectors," Van Dalen added.

According to the researcher, Cajamarquilla "is a very large city that could have housed between 10,000 and 20,000 people in a total of 167 hectares."

It was built around 200 BC and was occupied until 1500.

Cajamarquilla is located 24 km east of Lima and is one of the largest archaeological complexes in the city.