About 12 miles (20 km) from the shores of Lake Titicaca lie the ruins of what was once the site of the greatest city in South America. Thought by some to date back to 15,000 BC when it might have been on the shore of the lake, it is now considered by radio carbon dating to have begun around 1500 BC and flourished from around 300 to 1000 AD when it probably came to an end due to climate change - a worsening climate meant the area was no longer able to support the industrious agricultural population. One of the most fascinating aspects of the city is the famous Sun Gate, carved with icons said to relate to a calendar. To the side of the gate is a wall which contained 11 pillars and these are the actual calendar, marking the time of the year according to the position where the sun set every night and dividing the year into 20 fortnights of 18 days or 10 months of 36 days which also meshed every three years with a lunar calendar of 40 sidereal months making it one of the most sophisticated yet less known calendars in the world. This magnificient city was completely destroyed by the Spanish Conquistadores of the sixteenth century and the little that remained was further smashed up and used as ballast for the construction of the nearby railway. "Tiwanaku: a City Lost in Time" is an attempt to gather the remaining photographic evidence of the city from the time when it was first documented by Europeans and piece together the actual workings of the calendar and the system of cubits that was used in the construction of the monuments such as the Akapana pyramid, built so that one side marked a year of 360 days and the other the actual year of 3651/4 days, whilst some monuments were designed in "Egyptian" cubits, others in "Sumerian" cubits and finally we discover the length of the "Tiwanaku" cubit itself.
The first major synthesis exploring Tiwanaku civilization in its geographical and cultural setting.
This book, the first published history of the Tiwanakan peoples from their origins to their present survival, is a feat of scholarly and archaeological detection undertaken and led by the author.
This volume contains twelve papers from senior scholars, whose contributions discuss subjects from the farthest points of the southern Andes, where the iconic artifacts of Tiwanaku appear as offerings to the departed, to the heralded ruins ...
The Archaeology of Tiwanaku: The Myths, History, and Science of an Ancient Andean Civilization
Janusek explores the origins, development, and collapse of this ancient state through the lenses of social identities--gender, ethnicity, occupation, for example--and power relations.
The Enigma Of Tiwanaku And Puma Punku: A Visitor's Guide
Skillful modern archaeology has allowed people to look behind the facade and see, for the first time in many, many centuries, some of the secrets behind it. The story is fascinating, complex, and thoroughly human.
Though academics insist that both were the work of the bronze age Tiwanaku, there are clear indications that the original builders used very advanced high technologies in their construction.There is also a lot of evidence that Puma Punku ...
Today, through the diligent work of scholars from many countries, the disciplines of archaeology, art history, comparative ethnography and other modern historical sciences have begun to peel back the story of Puma Punku, and historians can ...
"For nearly a millennium (ca. A.D. 100-1000), the pre-Hispanic, pre-Inca state of Tiwanaku was one of the great centers of native Andean civilization, controlling a vast territory that would today...