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Showing posts with label Lake Titicaca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lake Titicaca. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Puma Punku

While most people know about the Pyramids, and wonder how they could have been built, few in the US have any knowledge about Puma Punku, built around 536 AD. Some of the stones in this  mysterious structure weigh over 100 tons, and have remarkable precision in the carving. Who did this?
No one seems to know. Linda Stasi of the New York Daily News is on her way to the jungles of Bolivia to find out. The site is 12,800 above sea level, so the mystery of how these stones got to such an elevation is indeed deep.
But of course some say it's simple. Aliens.
Illegal of course. That way they did not have to be paid much!


See below what Wiki has to say:

Pumapunku or Puma Punku (Aymara and Quechua puma cougar, puma, punku door, Hispanicized Puma Puncu) is part of a large temple complex or monument group that is part of the Tiwanaku Site near Tiwanaku, in western Bolivia. It is believed to date to 536AD and later.
Tiwanaku is significant in Inca traditions because it is believed to be the site where the world was created. In Aymara, Puma Punku's name means "The Door of the Puma". The Pumapunku complex consists of an unwalled western court, a central unwalled esplanade, a terraced platform mound that is faced with stone, and a walled eastern court.
The Pumapunku is a terraced earthen mound that is faced with blocks. It is 167.36 metres (549.1 feet) wide along its north–south axis and 116.7 metres (383 feet) long along its east–west axis. On the northeast and southeast corners of the Pumapunku, it has 20-metre (66-foot) wide projections that extend 27.6 metres (91 feet) north and south from the rectangular mound.
The eastern edge of the Pumapunku is occupied by what is called the Plataforma Lítica.. This structure consists of a stone terrace that is 6.75 by 38.72 metres (22.1 by 127.0 feet) in dimension. This terrace is paved with multiple, enormous stone blocks. It contains the largest stone slab found in both the Pumapunku and Tiwanaku Site, measuring 7.81 metres (25.6 feet) long, 5.17 metres (17.0 feet) wide and averages 1.07 m (3 ft 6 in) thick. Based upon the specific gravity of the red sandstone from which it was carved, this stone slab has been estimated to weigh 131 metric tons.
The other stonework and facing of the Pumapunku consists of a mixture of andesite and red sandstone. The core of the Pumapunku consists of clay. The fill underlying selected parts of the edge of the Pumapunku consists of river sand and cobbles instead of clay. Excavations at the Pumapunku have documented "three major building epochs, in addition to small repairs and remodeling"
At its peak, Pumapunku is thought to have been "unimaginably wondrous," adorned with polished metal plaques, brightly colored ceramic and fabric ornamentation, and visited by costumed citizens, elaborately dressed priests, and elites decked in exotic jewelry. Current understanding of this complex is limited due to its age, the lack of a written record, and the current deteriorated state of the structures due to treasure hunting, looting, stone mining for building stone and railroad ballast, and natural weathering.
The area within the kilometer separating the Pumapunku and Kalasasaya complexes has been surveyed using ground-penetrating radar, magnetometry, induced electrical conductivity, and magnetic susceptibility. The geophysical data collected from these surveys and excavations have revealed the presence of numerous man-made structures in the area between the Pumapunku and Kalasasaya complexes. These structures include the wall foundations of buildings and compounds, water conduits, pool-like features, revetments, terraces, residential compounds, and widespread gravel pavements, all of which now lie buried and hidden beneath the modern ground’s surface.
Researchers have worked to determine the age of the Pumapunku complex since the discovery of the Tiwanaku site. As noted by Andean specialist, W. H. Isbell, professor at Binghamton University, a radiocarbon date was obtained by Vranich from organic material from the lowermost and oldest layer of mound-fill forming the Pumapunku. This layer was deposited during the first of three construction epochs and dates the initial construction of the Pumapunku to 536–600 AD (1510 ±25 B.P. C14, calibrated date). Since the radiocarbon date came from the lowermost and oldest layer of mound-fill underlying the andesite and sandstone stonework, the stonework must have been constructed sometime after 536–600 AD. The excavation trenches of Vranich show that the clay, sand, and gravel fill of the Pumapunku complex lie directly on the sterile middle Pleistocene sediments. These excavation trenches also demonstrated the lack of any pre-Andean Middle Horizon cultural deposits within the area of the Tiwanaku Site adjacent to the Pumapunku complex.

Detail of stone with precisely cut straight line and tooled holes within the line
An example of high-precision small holes
Stone block with a set of blind holes of complex shape
The largest of these stone blocks is 7.81 meters long, 5.17 meters wide, averages 1.07 meters thick, and is estimated to weigh about 131 metric tons. The second largest stone block found within the Pumapunku is 7.90 metres (25.9 feet) long, 2.50 metres (8 feet 2 inches) wide, and averages 1.86 metres (6 feet 1 inch) thick. Its weight has been estimated to be 85.21 metric tons. Both of these stone blocks are part of the Plataforma Lítica and composed of red sandstone.[5] Based upon detailed petrographic and chemical analyses of samples from both individual stones and known quarry sites, archaeologists concluded that these and other red sandstone blocks were transported up a steep incline from a quarry near Lake Titicaca roughly 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) away. Smaller andesite blocks that were used for stone facing and carvings came from quarries within the Copacabana Peninsula about 90 kilometres (56 miles) away from and across Lake Titicaca from the Pumapunku and the rest of the Tiwanaku Site.
Archaeologists argue that the transport of these stones was accomplished by the large labor force of ancient Tiwanaku. Several theories have been proposed as to how this labor force transported the stones, although these theories remain speculative. Two of the more common proposals involve the use of llama skin ropes and the use of ramps and inclined planes.
In assembling the walls of Pumapunku, each stone was finely cut to interlock with the surrounding stones. The blocks were fit together like a puzzle, forming load-bearing joints without the use of mortar. One common engineering technique involves cutting the top of the lower stone at a certain angle, and placing another stone on top of it which was cut at the same angle.The precision with which these angles have been utilized to create flush joints is indicative of a highly sophisticated knowledge of stone-cutting and a thorough understanding of descriptive geometry. Many of the joints are so precise that not even a razor blade will fit between the stones.Much of the masonry is characterized by accurately cut rectilinear blocks of such uniformity that they could be interchanged for one another while maintaining a level surface and even joints. However, the blocks do not have the same dimensions, although they are close.The blocks were so precisely cut as to suggest the possibility of prefabrication and mass production, technologies far in advance of the Tiwanaku’s Inca successors hundreds of years later. Some of the stones are in an unfinished state, showing some of the techniques used to shape them. They were initially pounded by stone hammers—which can still be found in numbers on local andesite quarries—, creating depressions, and then slowly ground and polished with flat stones and sand.
Tiwanaku engineers were also adept at developing a civic infrastructure at this complex, constructing functional irrigation systems, hydraulic mechanisms, and waterproof sewage lines.
Puma Punku was a large earthen platform mound with three levels of stone retaining walls.Its layout is thought to have resembled a square. To sustain the weight of these massive structures, Tiwanaku architects were meticulous in creating foundations, often fitting stones directly to bedrock or digging precise trenches and carefully filling them with layered sedimentary stones to support large stone blocks.Modern day engineers argue that the base of the Pumapunku temple was constructed using a technique called layering and depositing. By alternating layers of sand from the interior and layers of composite from the exterior, the fills would overlap each other at the joints, essentially grading the contact points to create a sturdy base.
Notable features at Pumapunku are I-shaped architectural cramps, which are composed of a unique copper-arsenic-nickel bronze alloy. These I-shaped cramps were also used on a section of canal found at the base of the Akapana pyramid at Tiwanaku. These cramps were used to hold the blocks comprising the walls and bottom of stone-lined canals that drain sunken courts. I-cramps of unknown composition were used to hold together the massive slabs that formed Pumapunku's four large platforms. In the south canal of the Pumapunku, the I-shaped cramps were cast in place. In sharp contrast, the cramps used at the Akapana canal were fashioned by the cold hammering of copper-arsenic-nickel bronze ingots. The unique copper-arsenic-nickel bronze alloy is also found in metal artifacts within the region between Tiwanaku and San Pedro de Atacama during the late Middle Horizon around 600–900.
It is theorized[by whom?] the Pumapunku complex as well as its surrounding temples, the Akapana pyramid, Kalasasaya, Putuni, and Kerikala functioned as spiritual and ritual centers for the Tiwanaku. This area might have been viewed as the center of the Andean world, attracting pilgrims from far away to marvel in its beauty. These structures transformed the local landscape; Pumapunku was purposely integrated with Illimani mountain, a sacred peak that the Tiwanaku possibly believed to be home to the spirits of their dead. This area was believed to have existed between heaven and Earth. The spiritual significance and the sense of wonder would have been amplified into a "mind-altering and life-changing experience" through the use of hallucinogenic plants. Examinations of hair samples exhibit remnants of psychoactive substances in many mummies found in Tiwanaku culture from Northern Chile, even those of babies as young as one year of age, demonstrating the importance of these substances to the Tiwanaku.
As was characteristic of civilizations around this time, the Tiwanaku actively incorporated human sacrifice into their culture. The remains of dismembered bodies have been found throughout the area. Ceramic artifacts depict imagery of warriors, masked with puma skulls, decapitating their enemies and holding trophy skulls, and adorned with belts of human heads with their tongues torn out. It is believed that, because of certain markings on stones found at Puma Punku, the Gate of the Sun was originally part of Puma Punku.
The Tiwanaku civilization and the use of these temples appears to some to have peaked from 700 AD to 1000 AD, by which point the temples and surrounding area may have been home to some 400,000 people. An extensive infrastructure had been developed, including a complex irrigation system that extended more than 30 square miles (80 km2) to support cultivation of potatoes, quinoa, corn and other various crops. At its peak the Tiwanaku culture dominated the entire Lake Titicaca basin as well as portions of Bolivia and Chile.
This culture seems to have dissolved rather abruptly some time around 1000 AD, and researchers are still seeking answers as to why. A likely scenario involves rapid environmental change, possibly involving an extended drought. Unable to produce the massive crop yields necessary for their large population, the Tiwanaku are argued to have scattered into the local mountain ranges, only to disappear shortly thereafter. Puma Punku is thought to have been abandoned before it was finished.


Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Bolivian Quaker Education Fund Invitation 2013

Learning the Life of the Spirit


 

Many Friends in Bolivia - where it is unusually cold this summer season - are returning to school and university after their annual break.
Here, we invite you to join us in visiting among Bolivian Friends, perhaps help make arrangements for a Bolivian Friend to visit here, and share a word (or two) about our new address.
_________________________________________________________________________

You're Invited! 2013 Quaker Service & Study Tour by Barbara Stanford, BQEF Board Member

Visiting Bolivian Quakers in their homes and churches - on the slopes of the Andes, on the high plains around Lake Titicaca, and in the cities of El Alto and La Paz - was one of the highlights of my life. The Quaker Service and Study Tour gave me rich, horizon-expanding opportunities to know and understand Friends in Bolivia and their struggles and dreams.
Sarah and Mabel, two members of the scholarship students' "Messengers of Peace" Andina music group. I visited with BQEF scholarship students and heard about the challenge of moving from remote Aymara-speaking villages to university where materials are in Spanish and English, and about their dreams for improving the lives of their families and communities. We heard their music and song and ate their wonderful food, prepared and shared with warmth and generosity.
I worshiped in a Quaker church whose worship form was very different from mine, but where the Spirit was just as available, and where the congregation was warm and welcoming.
I met farmers raising llamas and hardy crops in some of Earth’s most difficult environments - farmers who were facing ever-greater challenges from the very visible effects of climate change.
Student Residence community members and Quaker Service & Study Tour volunteers work together to remove plants and lay a stone surface in the Student Residence courtyard.For our service project, we worked with parents and staff to complete a drainage project in the courtyard of the Quaker-run Student Residence in the beautiful Sorata valley. We ate, studied, and played with the delightful young people who live there during the school week. And we visited one of the remote mountainside homes from which students had to walk hours to go to school before the Residence was available.
This is an exciting time to visit one of the most beautiful countries in the world - Bolivia is experiencing dramatic social and political change as the indigenous majority emerges from centuries of oppression. The 2013 Quaker Service and Study Tour of Bolivia is now forming. This year, join us in working with individual BQEF scholarship students to help improve their English skills, so necessary for their studies.
Trip extensions are also available. Choose from Cusco - Machu Picchu, a visit to the vanishing Amazon jungle, to "The Mirror of the Heavens" (Salar de Uyuni, the world’s largest lithium-rich salt flat), and/or additional volunteering post-trip in Bolivia.
For more information about the trip, see www.TreasuresoftheAndes.com or contact Barbara Flynn at info@treasuresoftheandes.com, 707-823-6034 (California).
For more information about our scholarship students and the Student Residence in the beautiful Sorata valley, visit www.bqef.org._________________________________________________________________________

We've Moved!

We thank "Founder and Spark Plug" - now President Emeritus - Newton Garver for over a decade of servant leadership, and gladly help lighten his load by moving our U.S. office from his home. Newton will continue serving in an advisory and development capacity.

O
ur new address, effective now:

Bolivian Quaker Education Fund, Inc.
65 Spring Street
Fredonia, NY 14063

Meanwhile, some things haven't changed. Our email and website are still:
office@bqef.org
www.bqef.org

Please send your ideas, questions, volunteer inquiries, and donations to our new address shown above (and at the bottom of this email).
_________________________________________________________________________

Hands-on: Help arrange for a Bolivian Friend to meet US Quakers.

Alicia Lucasi and Ruben Hilari at FGCWould you like to help arrange visits of English-speaking Bolivian Quakers to U.S. Yearly Meetings and Friendly gatherings this summer? Workshop and interest group deadlines are fast approaching. Please email us today at office@bqef.org if you'd like to help arrange a visit, in your area or elsewhere. ________________________________________________________________________

Together

...we can continue to nurture and celebrate the spirit of young Very young Bolivian Friend with sign: "Yo Quiero Ser Luz" (I want to be Light)Bolivian Friends in their dreams of education and fellowship, with your support.

"An investment in Bolivian Quaker young people brings a whole lot of value for a small amount of money" as one of our supporters said.

Please click here to donate online via Network for Good

or send checks to:
Bolivian Quaker Education Fund, Inc.
65 Spring Street
Fredonia, NY 14063-2128

Please contact us if you would like to donate stock, at
office@bqef.org

May Light and Love bless your lives and endeavors.

Jens, Barbara
, Vickey, Bernabé, Juan, Alicia, and all of us here at BQEF and BQE-Bo.