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A Lucrative Industry

pVEB since the days of the Spanish conquest mining for mummies has been a steady and lucrative industry in Peru. Not that the mummies are desirable or valuable, but because the Incas and pre-Incas—ancient prehistoric peoples of Peru—interred ornaments, weapons, utensils, and implements with their dead, and many of these articles were of gold or silver.

How many tens of thousands of mummies were disinterred by the Spaniards never will be known, for they were searching only for precious metals and stones and destroyed all else. Neither will it ever be known how much treasure tliey recovered, but the total amount must have been stupendous. According to the old law, one-fifth of all such treasure belonged to the Spanish Crown—the Ming's quinta, as it was called—but unquestionably the Spanish mummy-miners paid no m'ore attention to the laws than do their descendants of to-day and rarely rendered an accouuL of what they found. Yet despite tins we know from old records in Peru tnat from 15G0 to 1592 over £IOO,OOO m gold and silver obtained from mummies were paid into the King’s quinta in one town. In other words the mummyminers of the vicinity admitted having been successful to the extent of £500,000. Moreover, this was all obtained from one burial mound, tne Huaea de Toledo, and only from a portion of that great, mound at that. And everywhere throughout the country men were mining for mummies in every cemetery and ruin thov could find.

Not every mummy or every grave, of course, contained gold or silver. In fact, not one out of 150 or more mummies is accompanied with precious metal, and countless thousands of mummies must have been destroyed during the early days. In this connection it is of interest to note that, despite the fact that although the Incas —and doubtless the pre-Incas as well —possessed incredible numbers of precious stones, yet so far as is known no true gem ever Ims heert found with a mummy in Pern.

That, the Incas had gems cannot be doubted, for not. only did the Spaniards bear testimony to this, but. many of the finest gems they took from the Peruvians were sent to Spain, so that even if the conquerors had mistaken semiprecious stones for true gems experts in Spain would have discovered the fact. E meralds, rubies, diamonds, sapphires, topazes-—nil arc described by ttu- con querors. Why, then have none of these been found in the graves and tombs? Did the Dons make such a clean sweep that none was left. Hardly. The only solution would seem to be that, for some unknown reason, perhaps superstition, gems were never buried, but were handed down through generations perhaps as sacred objects or talismans. In addition to the countless mummies that have been dug up by the professional treasure hunters who have been at. work for the past 400 years, thousands- of bodies have been disinterred by archaeologists, curio seekers, and others, and thousands more nave been destroyed in the course of cultivating

Treasure Hunting in Peru

Great Burial Places

land in carrying on private and public works. One would think that long ago the supply of mummies would have been exhausted. But so vast is the number of dead buried in Peru that despite all those that, have been disinterred practically no impression has been made upon the general supply. There is no more striking evidence of the immeasurable time that Peru must have been inhabited, and the incredible numbers of its ancient population, than the number of burial places. No one would venture even to estimate the number of mummies that- were buried or that yet remain. From the borders of Ecuador to the Chilean boundary and beyond, ana from the Pacific Coast to far beyond the/Andes, there is scarcely a square mile that docs not have its graves, its mounds, its cemeteries. Many of the necropolises cover hundreds of acres, many of the burial mounds arc mountain like; and in ancient ruined cities mummies by thousands fill the earth between and beneath the crumbling buildings and one-time streets. Often the luirial mounds appear more like natural hills than the work of humans. The Huaea Juliana, within the suburb of Miration's, near Lima, is: nearly half a mile in length, nearly one-fourth of a mile in width, and rises to a height of more than 100 feet, and this is but one of dozens of equally large mounds in the vicinity. At Paehacainae, the ancient holy city, also close to Penis’ capital, practically every available foot of earth is filled with relics of the dead. Here, for many centuries, digging has been carried on unceasingly. Much of the city appears like a battlefield exposed to shell fire.

Everywhere are pits, holes, trenches, craters," piles of sand and stone littered with human skulls and bones, wisps of human hair, shrivelled hands and feet, broken pottery, fragments of textiles, splintered wooden utensils, remains of gourds and baskets, and the cotton, rope and basketworlc mummywrappings. In many spots the skulls cast aside by the diggers form veritable piles, and m other places one cannot walk without trampling on human bones The once magnificent Temple of Pachacamae that covers a high artificial hill, and that in the Incan days contained the vast treasure that, more than anything else lured Pizarro to Peru, has been specially exposed to desecration. Nothing is sacred to the professional niuminy-niiner, and in their search for treasure these vandals nave cut great breaches in the massive stone ami adobe walls, have ruthlessly undermined the structure, and have destroyed a large portion of -what was one of the most magnificent of prehistoric, temples in Peru. And yet even at Pachacamae there are as many bodies remaining as have been (list interred. One scarcely can dig anywhere at Pachacamae without exposing one or more mummies, and the same is practically true of every ancient necropolis and city ia Peru.

The new developments about, Linn*, are surrounded by burial mounds, and the homes of the suburbanites are erectled over prehistoric graveyards. It is not unusual to see a modern residence

with scattered skulls, bones, scalps, and mummy-wrappings within a few yards of the front door, and in cultivating flower gardens the residents are as likely to turn up mummies as stones. Probably there is no other country on earth where the inhabitants both natives and foreigners—so dwell amid countless dead, but no one appears to give it a thought. Perhaps they do not look upon the bodies and bones of men and women over a thousand years old in the same light as they would regard the remains of humans more recentlyi dead.

Even to guess at the number of graves in a small section of the burial places is impossible. Oftentimes the graves are in layers four, live, or more deep, one ancient race having interred its dead above the remains of its predecessors. But it is certain that, on the coastal plains alone, millions of mummies still remain. Although vast num-J bers were buried in the loose desert,' sand and more interred in bottlc-shapeu stone-lined graves, probably twice as many were placed in immense burial mounds. These mounds testify at once tf. the dense prehistoric population of Peru and to the inhabitants’ industry.

Although outwardly they appear like steep-sided liills of sand and loose stones, upon close examination one discovers that they are carefully fortified with adobe bricks. Even in the smaller mounds millions of those bricks were employed, and one’s imagination is staggered at the thought of the thousands of millions of bricks that must have been used in the construction of some of the really immense mounds.

Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of men must have been employed for years erecting these miniature mountains, and, while the bricks upon the surface have reverted to their original constituents of dry mud and pebbles, those beneath are still in perfect condition, and, in many places ,are mined for use in modern buildings. "When the Avendi Progreso, connecting Lima and Oalao, was built, it was eu.. through one end of these enormous mounds, and the steam shovels ruthlessly destroyed graves, mummies, and archaeological treasures. For months the roadside was littered with fragments of bodies and wrappings, and yet the portion thus demolished was not one-live-hundredth of the entire mound.

Despite all this, despite the hundreds nl thousands of specimens of textiles, pottery, mummies and other artifacts in the various museums of the world, the surface —scientifically speaking—has scarcely been scratched. We know tvallv verv little of the ancient Peru-

\ inn races. We are -wholly ignorant ov the culture of many ancient races who antedated the Incans; and there are countless unsolved puzzles regarding the lnenns. the most recent of all Permian civilisations. Great stone cities exist that have never been studied nor excavated, there are vast cemeteries that no archaeologist has seen. The origin, the history, the chronology of the ancient Peruvians all remain shrouded in mvstery.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19310110.2.101

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 9

Word Count
1,497

A Lucrative Industry Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 9

A Lucrative Industry Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 9