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[Articles & News] Incan Empire's 'Reign of Terror' Revealed in Four Ancient Skulls Found in Trash Heap.

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Post time: 28-8-2019 11:21:52 Posted From Mobile Phone
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The skulls were strung up in a terrifying display of power.
Image
Images of one skull show where holes were drilled, possibly to allow the skulls to be strung up in a display of violence.(Image: © Francisco Garrido, National Museum of Natural History in Santiago, Chile)
▼ Something was amiss at the ruins of Iglesia Colorada, an ancient Incan  villagein the foothills of the Andes. In the remains of what had been a garbage dump, among ancient food scraps and shards of discarded pottery, researchers discovered four skulls. No bodies, no formal burial, no jewelry to carry on to an afterlife — just the skulls. No one knew why they were there.
For over 15 years, since the skulls were uncovered in 2003, the mystery has baffled archaeologists. But two researchers at the National Museum of Natural History in Santiago, Chile, have proposed an explanation: The skulls paint a picture of an Incan reign of  terror, in which the heads of four villagers were put on display as a warning to inhabitants.
The period from the late 1400s to the early 1500s was a tumultuous time for much of South America. During these years, the Incan empire was slowly expanding its reach across the Andes. While civilizations had long existed in the valleys of the Andes, they were mostly isolated, said study co-author Francisco Garrido, the curator of archaeology at the National Museum of Natural History. While some of these places probably joined the empire without much resistance, others weren't so amenable, he added.
"They really didn't buy the idea of incorporating to an Incan empire," Garrido told Live Science.
That was probably the case in the town of Iglesia Colorada, Garrido and his co-author, Catalina Morales, argue in a new study in the August 2019 issue of the journal Latin American  Antiquity. And based on the mysterious skulls in the rubbish heap, which date back to this period of Incan expansion, conquerors resorted to violence to terrify villagers into submission, the study authors suggest.
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