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Nazca Plateau & The Nazca Geoglyphs

 

Peru & The Nazca Plateau Website Menu:

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Nazca Archaeology

Nazca Archaeology
•Nazca Plateau Overview
•Nazca Lines Science
•Dr. Maria Reiche
•Dr. Paul Kosok
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Nazca Archaeology

Lost Cities Of Peru & Chile
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Nazca Archaeology

Petroglyphs (Rupestre)
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Rock Art Link to an external website
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Desert Pavements

Nazca Archaeology

Geoglyphs
•Nazca Lines
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Nazca Archaeology

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Pampa San Jos้ & Pampa Jumana
Nazca • Ica • Peru

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

geoglyph requires elevated viewing
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

One Of The Nazca Birds

 

   

The town of Nazca has recently been dumping its trash on the pampa (plain), destroying some of the Nazca lines in the process. This has caused some controversy; it is believed the mayor issued the order to protest a lack of aid to Nazca. Under President Alberto Ken'ya Fujimori's rule, Nazca received money to turn the irrigation canals (part of the Cantayo Aqueduct system) into tourist attractions. Unfortunately, this consisted of tearing up some of the access points to the canals and replacing them with reconstructions of how they were believed to have looked. President Alejandro Toledo, whose partner is an anthropologist, stopped the process, and the aid as a result.  This is just one example of the risks the Nazca Lines face daily!

Since 1997 Nazca is also the location of a major Canadian gold mining operation. The people who were living on the land for the previous 2000 years did not have title to the land so they were easily displaced without legal problems or concerns. Since then, there have been some attempts to legalize poor citizens' ownership of their land and their fixed property, in response to Hernando de Soto's research on the poor.

 

 

A map of Nazca, Ica, Peru. Click to see the map on MSN Maps & Directions
Link to an external website

The Nazca (Nasca) Plain lies west of the Andes Mountains
 in the narrow coastal desert

 

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The Nazca (Nasca) Plain lies west of the Andes Mountains
 in the narrow coastal desert

 

click photo to enlarge

The ancient cultures of North-Western South America

 

Nazca (sometimes spelled Nasca, Nosca, or Naxca) is the name of a system of valleys on the southern coast of Peru, and the name of the region's largest existing town. It is also the name applied to the Nazca culture that flourished in the area between 300 BC and AD 800. They were believed to be responsible for the Nazca Lines and the ceremonial city of Cahuachi; they also constructed an impressive system of underground aqueducts that still function today.
   

 

The famous Nazca Flamingo!

 

 

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The Nazca Lines area is generally defined as  between the Nazca and Ingenio rivers.  However, there are large groups of lines in the Palpa Valley, and elsewhere up and down the Pacific Coast of South America

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

geoglyph requires elevated viewing
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

One of the Nazca (Palpa) Geoglyphs illuminated at night

 

   
Nazca Lines Location:
Central Coast, 1,929 feet (588 m.) above sea level

Distances:
460 Km (286 miles) from Lima
135 Km (84 miles) from Ica
205 Km (127.4 miles) from Paracas
566 Km (351.8 miles) from Arequipa

 

 

30-n

click photo to enlarge
Geologic Map of Nazca
click here for the master index
Link to an external website

 

The Nazca Lines Geoglyphs Rio Palpa Valley Palpa Lines Geoglyphs Palpa Valley Petroglyphs Peru Ingenio Lines Geoglyphs Llipata Figures Geoglyphs Rio Ingenio Valley Peru Maria Reiche Observation Tower Lost City of Cahuachi and The Cahuachi Geoglyphs, and Estaqueria Archaeological Site Cantalloc Aqueducts & Geoglyphs

"the Nasca managed to organize a society and take advantage of resources
from the ocean and the mountains. They were truly an advanced society,"


The BIG Picture: Nazca Geoglyph Zone Map - click an item to view that page ป

The Nazca lines aren't the only geoglyphs in the world. The tradition of drawing figures on the ground spans the pacific coastal desert areas from central California to northern Chile, as well as Europe and Asia. The drawings at Nazca, however, are unique because of their size and density within a 500 square kilometer area in southwest Peru. Straight lines that go on for hundreds of kilometers, only swerving out by a few degrees, huge trapezoids and spirals, and animal figures, some of which can be seen in their entirety from space - have been holding the attention of archeologists since the 1920s. How did the Nazcans make them so precise? For whom? And why?

As it turns out, how they got their drawings so precise is the one question on which scientists can agree. The Peruvian desert provided a perfect tableau for the Nazcan 'artists'. Covered by fist-sized volcanic rocks, blackened and varnished from exposure to the atmosphere, the desert or pampa surface makes a sharp contrast to the soft yellow soil only inches underneath the stones. By simply removing the overlying stones and piling them on each side, the Nazcans were able to sketch their drawings onto what may be the greatest scratch pad in the world. In another climate, the drawings would have been obliterated in months, but Nazca is one of the driest and most windless regions on Earth. Climate and geology conspired to create an ideal medium for the Nazcans - leaving their distinctive images to be admired and pondered over thousands of years later.

But how were the Nazcans able to get the hundreds of kilometers-long lines so straight, and their figures in such perfect proportions?

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class One Geoglyph - precise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

The Perfect Spiral

 

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class One Geoglyph - precise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Maria Reiche in 1949 standing next to the dog's feet

 

  

Continue Your Exploration

Nazca (Nasca) Lines
Nazca Symbols
Nazca Culture
Nazca Science

The First Explorers

 

Julio C. Tello in Paracas 1925

In 1927, archaeologist Mejia Xespe an assistant to Julio C. Tello, the Father of Peruvian Archeology - was told of the presence of some mysterious geoglyphs or lines or traces on the ground along the Peruvian coast.  In those days, he had just started his archaeological studies and had not given much importance to these suggestive lines in the Pampas Nasca.   It is important to understand that the appeal of an unknown series of lines was much lower than other, more attractive archaeological sites, such as Chavin, Chan-Chan, and, of course, the majestic Machu Picchu in Cuzco department.

It was that same year, 1927, that Dr. Paul Kosok, another researcher in ancient agriculture, from the United States, came to Peru, attracted by these pre-Columbian cultures.  He learned of the Nasca Lines, and thinking them to be remnants of agricultural irrigation systems, chose to explore them.  On one of his first trips through the south, he had seen the extensive lines of many on both sides of the road near the mountains.
   
More than just a curiosity, Kosok note the clean and uniform strokes apparently used in creating these diverse geometric figures: triangles, rectangles, quadrangles, etc. The lines extended in multiple directions and assembling into fine roads, sidewalks, and broad avenues.

Great was his surprise when he discovered that the lines formed geometric shapes, even animals!  That one of the drawings actually produced the unmistakable shape of a bird in flight. But he had found the key to the riddle? Some at the time simply thought this was the World's Largest Book of Astronomy, equating the lines and symbols with the constellations.

Subsequent studies suggested that the Nascans built these lines in order to mark various dates on their astronomical calendar, such as the arrival of winter, summer, and other events related to their agricultural and cultural activities.

In 1946, he returned to the United States, but not before suggesting to Maria Reiche, who had assisted in the investigation, that she pursue the study of the drawings that he had begun to decipher. Maria devoted her life to this work.
Since many of the drawings must be viewed from the air to be seen in their entirety, the task of getting such large figures so perfectly proportioned and the lines so straight was thought to have required an observer from above to guide the drawings. This led some to hypothesize that the Nazcans may have been capable of flight! (however, there is NO PROOF of this!)

But Dr. Persis B. Clarkson, an archeologist and geoglyph expert at the University of Winnipeg says the technology required was very easy and straightforward. "It was not a difficult technology... all you need is the will." As Clarkson explains, all it took was careful and diligent attention to sight lines.

For the straight lines, two wooden stakes could be used to guide the placement of a third stake along the line. One person 'sights along' the first two stakes and instructs a second person where to place the third stake. Strings could also have been used to help ensure the lines were straight. This process could be repeated for hundreds of kilometres with due diligence and time.

During the summer of 1984, ten volunteers from Earthwatch, an international nonprofit organization that supports scientific field research, helped Anthony Aveni, an astronomer and anthropologist at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York in a study of the Nazca lines. They constructed a straight line that wound up into a spiral 35 meters long and one meter wide in just an hour and a half - without a printed plan. One group squatted in the interior of the figure, uncovering the stones to let the pale yellow soil underneath to show, while another group moved these stones to the edge of the figures and arranged them into piles about a half a meter high. A third group supervised the edging process to ensure that things lined up correctly. The result, says Aveni, was a figure that was as accurate as any Nazca drawing measured with a surveyor's instrument.

By extrapolating their results, Aveni and his team concluded that the work crew could have cleared an average-sized trapezoid spanning an area of 16,000 square meters in about a week. With a work force of 10,000 people, Aveni estimates that every line and trapezoid on the entire pampa could have been made in less than a decade.

Aveni's article in Archaeology (August 1986) sets the Nazca lines in perspective and adds some new observations. First, Aveni deflates their mystery a bit. You do not have to be in an airplane to appreciate the lines; most can be viewed from ground level, even better from nearby foothills. Although there are some 1,300 kilometers of lines and about 300 geometric figures, their construction did not really involve much labor or special engineering skills. Even so, the Nazca lines are remarkable, and we really do not know for certain why they were etched on the Peruvian pampa.

In his early research on the Nazca lines, Aveni noted their strong similarity to the "ceque" system of 41 imaginary lines radiating outwards from the Inca's Temple of the Sun, at Cuzco -- the "navel" of the Inca universe. "...the ceque system was a highly ordered hierarchical cosmographical map, a mnemonic scheme that incorporated virtually all important matters connected with the Inca world view."                             continued ...

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class One Geoglyph - precise object - context consistent

 

A young Maria Reiche standing by a long line in 1949

 

   
Could the Nazca lines have been a forerunner of the ceque system? Aveni also noticed that the Nazca lines and geometrical figures were closely related to watercourses. Also, many of the lines definitely functioned as footpaths. It was also apparent that the animal figures, which were laid down much earlier than the line systems, were not related conceptually to the line scheme.

Aveni concluded: "...whatever the final answer may be to the mystery of the Nazca lines, this much is certain: the pampa is not a confused and meaningless maze of lines, and it was no more intended to be viewed from the air than an Iowa wheat field. The lines and line centers give evidence of a great deal of order, and the well-entrenched concept of radiality offers affinities between the ceque system of Cuzco and the lines on the pampa. All the clues point to a ritual scheme involving water, irrigation and planting; but as we might expect of these ancient cultures, elements of astronomy and calendar were also evident."

See how they did it here ป

  

In Memoriam

Maria Reiche Neuman

1903-1998

German-born mathematician,  archaeologist, and savior of the Nazca Lines

Maria's Page 

The Maria Reiche Association in Germany Link to an external website
Please visit her organization and make a donation!

  

Advertisement

According to Viktoria Nikitzki of the Maria Reiche Centre (an organization dedicated to studying and protecting the Nazca Lines), pollution and erosion caused by deforestation threaten the continued existence of the Nazca lines. She is quoted as saying "The Lines themselves are superficial, they are only 10 to 30cm deep and could be easily washed away... Nazca has only ever received a small amount of rain. But now there are great changes to the weather all over the world. The Lines cannot resist heavy rain without being damaged." However, Mario Olaechea Aquije, the archaeological resident from Peru's National Institute of Culture in Nazca, Peru, and a team of specialists surveyed the area after the flooding and mudslides occurring in the area in mid-February of 2007. He announces that "the mudslides and heavy rains did not appear to have caused any significant damage to the Nazca Lines," but that the nearby Southern Panamerican Highway did suffer damage, and "the damage done to the roads should serve as a reminder to just how fragile these figures are."  However, it is worth noting that undiscovered and undocumented geoglyphs may well have been lost, hence the need for exhaustive mapping of all geoglyph areas.

 

 

Vehicle Traffic  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

geoglyph requires elevated viewing
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears damaged or partially destroyed
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Vehicles driving through theses can leave permanent scars from just one passing!

 

Human Damage  

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears damaged or partially destroyed
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Many lines appear to have been either reworked or damaged

 

Erosion  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

geoglyph requires elevated viewing
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears damaged or partially destroyed
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Even after millennia of weather and erosion long lines remain visible

 

   
Lean more about the risks to the Nazca Lines  
   
  

 

 

 

click photo to enlarge

  Maria Reiche's observation tower

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
geoglyph requires elevated viewing
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears damaged or partially destroyed
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class One Geoglyph - precise object - context consistent
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

NASA Nazca 3000x3000 image

 

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National Geographic Magazine May 1975 Article On Nazca

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Visit The National Geographic Website & Subscribe to the National Geographic Magazine!
Visit the

National Geographic
website
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Presented for scholarly and educational purposes only.
Any remaining copyrights acknowledged.

Another Nazca Curiosity: Whale Fossils

Go To The Top Of The Page ------ NazcaMystery.com

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  Whale Fossils On The Nazca Plain

 

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For Your Information

Go To The Top Of The Page ------ NazcaMystery.com

   

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Image Quality

A note about image quality:  images of lines and symbols taken by air or from satellite images are adjusted to improve contrast and visibility of the artifact (line or symbol).  The results vary from image to image.  We apologize for the quality of some of the images, but it is due to the original source images, and the difficulty of photographing subject object.   

   

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Ignacio Morsesky 126,
NAZCA – PERU
Telephone:
0051-56-52-23-79
Mobile:
0051-56-969-11-55
Fax:
 0051-56-52-23-79
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The Seven Wonders Of Peru (Spanish)

 
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