Inside the untouched tomb of Peru’s ancient Wari royals
Last edited Sun May 25, 2014, 12:31 AM - Edit history (1)
Inside the untouched tomb of Perus ancient Wari royals
Glittering treasures and priceless artifacts were uncovered at the arid El Castillo de Huarmey site located about 185 miles north of Lima, and National Geographics June issue offers a glimpse of some of the items discovered in the mausoleum.
BY Victoria Taylor /
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS /
Saturday, May 24, 2014, 2:40 PM
For archeologists, the unlooted Wari tomb at El Castillo de Huarmey in Peru was truly full of buried treasure.
The untouched mausoleum contained not only gold jewelry and copper-alloy axes, but also mummified women believed to have been queens and a painted flask that tells of a Wari lord traveling by raft.
The June issue of National Geographic offers a peek into the chambers and artifacts that are helping scholars and archeologists pieces together the history of the mysterious people who established an empire in the Andes centuries before the Incas.
A team of Polish and Peruvian archeologists lead by Milosz Giersz announced the discovery of the royal tomb in June 2013.
They had actually found it a few months earlier but kept their revolutionary find under wraps out of fear that modern day looters would descend upon the at-least-1,000-year-old temple.
More:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/untouched-tomb-peru-ancient-wari-royals-article-1.1804479#ixzz32gVSK9wY