Домой United States USA — IT Iconic Andean monument may have been used for Indigenous accounting

Iconic Andean monument may have been used for Indigenous accounting

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Sediment analysis and drone photography of the iconic South American monument of Monte Sierpe (aka «Band of Holes») support a new interpretation of this mysterious landscape feature as part of an Indigenous system of accounting and exchange.
Sediment analysis and drone photography of the iconic South American monument of Monte Sierpe (aka «Band of Holes») support a new interpretation of this mysterious landscape feature as part of an Indigenous system of accounting and exchange.
Stretching 1.5 km across the Pisco Valley of the southern Peruvian Andes, Monte Sierpe (meaning serpent mountain) is a large row of approximately 5,200 precisely aligned holes (1–2 m wide and 0.5–1 m deep), organized into sections or blocks.
It first gained modern attention in 1933, when aerial photographs of the holes were published in National Geographic, but the monument’s purpose is still uncertain.
«Hypotheses regarding Monte Sierpe’s purpose range from defense, storage, and accounting to water collection, fog capture, and gardening», says lead author Dr. Jacob Bongers from the University of Sydney.

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