A cat about 37 meters long resting on a sandy hill is the new figure that the archaeologists of the Peruvian Ministry of Culture have found in the Pampa de Nazca,

home of the famous geoglyphs

that have been part

of the Unesco World Heritage list since 1994.

The feline was carved on the slopes of a hill in the middle of the desert of the Nazca region some

two hundred years before our era

, long before the appearance of the famous figures - the "monkey", the "spider" or the "bird. "- which make the area one of the places with the greatest archaeological interest in Peru, and there it remained hidden for almost 2000 years, a few meters from the Panamericana, the main highway that runs from north to south throughout the country.

CASUAL DISCOVERY

The discovery occurred, according to archaeologist

Jhonny Isla,

head of the management system of the Nasca-Palpa Archaeological Park, when the authorities decided to

improve access to the main natural viewpoint

that allows visitors to contemplate from land part of the gigantic figures that dominate the landscape of the area.

"From the Ministry of Culture we realized that access to the viewpoint, in fact, passed over a geoglyph, and we considered changing it, since it is not possible that access was promoted by damaging heritage ... Another issue is that the ascent was complicated and we wanted to facilitate a safer passage ... And in that process,

we realized that there were traces on that slope

that were in no way natural, "said Isla.

Despite the evident erosion of the area, through photographs taken with drones, it was revealed what from the beginning

"looked like a zoomorphic figure, a feline",

which had been hidden from everyone's view for hundreds of years.

"It is striking that new figures can still be identified, but we know that

there are others that can be found.

In recent years, the use of drones, which above all allow us to take images on hillsides, makes that possible" , said the archaeologist.

The initial discovery occurred at the beginning of this year, but due to the stoppage of activities in the country due to covid-19,

the field work has not been completed until now,

revealing the figure of an animal looking ahead and sits on his side, drawn with lines about a foot thick.

CULTURE PARACAS

Everything seems to indicate that the animal belongs to the

Paracas culture,

which preceded the Nazca culture by several centuries, which created the geoglyphs for which this region is known.

"In recent years, between the Palpa and Nazca valleys, some

80 or 100 new figures

have been identified

,

which precede those of the Nazca culture. These are smaller and are drawn on the slopes of hills, clearly of a tradition It is known from the iconographic comparisons. For example, Paracas textiles have birds, felines, or characters easily comparable with those glyphs, "explained the researcher.

In this sense, Isla pointed out that the historical and cultural interpretation of these findings is different from that of the Nazca geoglyphs,

much larger and difficult to perceive with the naked eye

.

"The meaning of the Nazca geoglyphs has something certain as an answer: they were

linked to water and fertility.

Nothing strange for a people who lived in a desert and for whom water was central (...) But these new ones, more small, that appear in groups, because they involve a different conception: they are made for people to see, "reasoned the archaeologist.

Thus, while the figures of the Nazca culture are made "by men, for the gods," those of the Paracas

"are of men for men," he

said.

"In any case, it is evident that this immense desert constituted a cultural landscape that was integrated and occupied by society,

it was not an abandoned landscape and had a very special meaning,

for hundreds of years," Isla added.

The Nazca Lines, discovered in 1927, constitute a vast complex of zoomorphic, geometric or plant images, whose arrival in the world was possible thanks to the German-Peruvian

María Reiche

(1903-1998), who dedicated a large part of her life to the study and conservation of geoglyphs.

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