Posts Tagged site

Treasures of Northern Peru – Chan Chan and Trujillo

Trujillo is known as “the city of eternal spring” due to its near perfect weather year round – with sunny skies and 70 degree temperatures. Located on the northern coast of Peru it is a historic city in an area that has been inhabited for thousands of years. It may be this ideal climate that has made it so idylic.

Modern Trujillo, is at its core a walled colonial city that was founded by conquistador Diego de Almagro in 1534. Trujillo has twice served as capital of Peru and was the birthplace of the Peruvian Justice System.

Visiting Trujillo offers visitors to discover lovely beautiful beaches, renowned culture, as well as archaeological sites like the Moche’s Huacas de la Sol y Luna ( Temple of Sun and Moon), the largest pre Colombian city in the Americas, Chan Chan. Trujillo is an diverse destination and it’s friendly people make it a wonderful place to spend a night or two while visiting Peru’s Kingdom’s of the North.

Peru is home to a number of fascinating archaeological sites. Peru has been home to numerous cultures for thousands of years and due to its dry coastal climate many ancient treasures many of them have been preserved allowing today’s visitors to glimpse into the colorful cultures and their magnificent works of art.

A lesser known sites is a short 15 minute drive south of Trujillo is one of the most spectacular. The Huacas de la Sol y Luna are located in a valley along the Moche River. The huacas are adobe pyramids built by the Moche Culture approximately 1500 years ago. The Temple of the Moon is the smaller of the two temples and is located in front of Cerro Blanco in a North-South Orientation and served as the religious center for the city. While the Temple of the Sun is the newer and larger of the two temples has an east-west orientation, is located in front of Cerro Negro and served as the administration center. The two Huacas are separated by a valley approximately 500 square meters wide that served as the Moche Capital City.

Restoration of the Temple of the Moon began in 1991 and the site was opened to visitors in 1995, while restoration of the Temple of the Sun is scheduled to begin in 2011. Visiting the sites includes a visit to the museum located near the entrance of the Temple of the Moon. The University of Trujillo Museum has an excellent collection of artifacts collected from the site as well as several multimedia presentations of the Moches including their art, architecture and religion.

Thanks to the Moches belief system, the Temple de Luna is one of the most interesting archeological visits in the Americas. The Moches built the pyramids in levels. Each approximately 100 years they would build a new pyramid completely encompassing the old pyramid. To do so they would fill the old structure will adobe bricks and then plaster over the bricks to seal off the old and make way for the new. As a result when archaeologist began studying the site some 20 years ago, they began peeling back layers and uncovering the original art work of the Moches, tombs, ceramics, and other ornaments. Their work has been solely to discover and preserve the site for the future – there has been no restoration or “reinterpretation” of the pyramid as is seen at many of the other archaeological sites.

Development of the site – the two pyramids and the city in between has been done completely with private funding from individuals, foundations, the university and companies. Much of the work is done by students both locally and from aboard. The Temple of the Moon is a fascinating site well worth the visit and we can only believe that once work begins on the Temple of the Sun and the wonders of that site are made available to the public, that it will become one of the most popular destinations in Peru.

Prior to the Incas the Chimu Culture lived in the fertile valley area near modern day Trujillo in northern Peru. Descendants of the great Moche Culture who built the great Pyramids of Sol y Luna the Chumu Culture had some similarities to the Moche and some distinct differences in the way they lived. Like the Moche the Chimu lived off the fruit of the sea, they used adobe as their main construction material, they decorated their construction and their ceramics with paintings done in yellows, reds, blacks and whites.

However unlike the Moche’s the Chamu did not build enormous pyramids with the city between them – the Chimu built Chan Chan. At 7.7 square miles Chan Chan was the largest pre-Columbian city in the Americas. The city was built with a triangular shaped walled city with the outside protective walls stretching 50 – 60 feet in to the air. It was comprised of 10 walled citadels which housed palaces, burial chambers, temples, boulevards, ceremonial plazas and springs were dug and reservoirs created so that they would have fresh water. The exterior walls made the city so impregnable that even after a lengthy 10 year war, the only way the Inca’s were capable of conquering the city was to finally cut off water supply by breaking the aqueduct system that had been built to provide water to the farms and city.

The Chimu so hated the Incas that when the Spanish arrived they welcomed them with open arms. Francisco Pizzaro and Diego de Almagro established the neighboring city of Trujillo named after Pizzaro’s home in Spain. The Chimu quickly abandoned Chan Chan and the once great city laid in waste to the environment. Winds and rain during years of el Niño would deteriorate the city’s walls and the colorful murals. For hundreds of years there it sat until in 1969 a Harvard mission headed by Michael E. Moseley came to study Chan Chan. Read the rest of this entry »

,

No Comments

Underwater Navigation Tips and Techniques

By Steven Andrews

Learning how to use instruments and natural features to find your way around underwater is important. Accurate navigation will help you to reach your planned exit point at the end of a dive, and will also help you find and explore features of interest, such as wrecks.

Mapping the Site

It is easy to become disoriented in poor visibility, but good navigation skills will help you find your way, even when conditions are against you. Developing such skills will make you less dependent on other divers for your own safety if you always rely on your buddy to lead the way, you could find yourself in trouble if you become separated.

On first entering the water, make mental notes of the surrounding feature such as unusual rocks, coral, or your position on a wreck site. As you progress through the dive, try to build up a map of the site in your mind. At every turning point, note nearby features and which direction you turned in relation to them Look at the seabed geology, too: rocks often have features or show strata that make memorable visual markers. It may be helpful to jot notes down on a slate.

Natural Navigation Aids

A compass gives the most accurate directional information, but there are also clues in nature. If the water is clear and shallow enough, or if there are any shadows cast by rocks, you can use the Sun as a directional reference. On a morning dive, for example, the Sun will be in the east, fake note of which way the current is running. (If you are diving close to slack water, at high or low tide, this may change by as much as 180° as the tide begins to turn.) Even if you cannot feel the current, you can find visual clues to its direction. Plankton, for example, drift along with the current, so shoals of fish station themselves lacing into the current so that (hey can feed on them. Kelp fronds flow in the direction of the current. Exhaust bubbles will rise up toward the surface (unless you are in a down current). Read the rest of this entry »

, , , , , , , , ,

No Comments