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Related: About this forumChavín de Huantar: The Ancient Peruvian Site was Built to Create Ceremonial Sounds
Chavín de Huantar: The Ancient Peruvian Site was Built to Create Ceremonial Sounds
By Akshaya B S | Feb 19, 2012 05:54 AM EDT
Researchers from the Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, have discovered that Chavín de Huantar, an archaeological site in this high valley of the Peruvian Andes, was built to create certain ceremonial sound effects.
During the experiment, the researchers played sounds from loudspeakers located at various points in the site. They asked a group of people, who were made to stand at the different locations in the site, where the sound was coming from.
The design of the maze misled people about the true location of the source of the sound. These results added more evidence that the ceremonial center at Chavín de Huantar was designed to create different sound effects.
The archaeological site contains ruins and artifacts constructed between 1500 and 300 B.C. It consists of number of terraces, squares, ornate megaliths, and a temple
More:
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/articles/300985/20120219/researchers-discover-spooky-sounds-ancient-peruvian-site.htm
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Photos: http://www.arqueologiadelperu.com.ar/chavin2.htm
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You might want to take a moment or two and click on google images for this amazing site:
http://images.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4TSND_enUS411US412&q=Chav%c3%adn+de+Huantar+Peru&biw=1187&bih=630&sei=5FlBT63LIsjn0QGJsozABw&tbm=isch
Judi Lynn
(160,516 posts)Haunting Sounds at an Ancient Peruvian Site
by Dan Ferber on 16 February 2012, 10:27 PM
VANCOUVER, CANADAMore than 3 millennia ago, ancient people flocked to Chavín de Huantar, a village in a high valley in the Peruvian Andes, to hear the oracles speak. And indeed they spokein the voice of resonant conch shell trumpets, and with the help of some clever architectural design, according to findings presented here today at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (which publishes ScienceNOW). The research suggests that the Chavín cultureand perhaps other ancient culturesknew acoustic tricks that might be the envy of a modern concert hall engineer.
Chavín de Huantar consists of terraces, squares, ornate megaliths, and a temple, and theres abundant evidence that it was used for religious ceremonies. The site also contains bas-relief sculptures sporting powerful animal imagery, including jaguars, condors, and snakes; images of hallucinogenic plants; and artifacts of the tools used to prepare them for consumption.
Chavín de Huantar is particularly well suited to the study of ancient uses of sound, says Miriam Kolar, an archeoacoustics researcher at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. Thats because the interior architecture contains elaborate, multilevel mazes with long corridors and staircases that affect acoustics today and are well enough preserved to detect what the original residents must have heard. Whats more, ancient conch shell trumpets have been excavated in the village; when blown into, the shells make a haunting, warbling sound, and fossil conch shells are embedded in stones on the floor of the temple. Kolar played a recording of the conch shell trumpet at the meeting. Its not very imposing over loudspeakers, she said. But in person it rattles your bones.
In the 1970s, a Peruvian archeologist had identified a large canal at Chavín de Huantar with built-in terraces, which he proposed were built to create sound from water rushing over edge. Kolar and her colleagues suspected that other parts of the site might have been designed and built to create certain sound effects. Sure enough, a long, narrow central passageway grew narrower, a design that ensured that the sound of conch shell trumpets called pututus, but not other sounds, propagates from the interior passages of the temple to the outside. The researchers suspect that a priest would call to the oracle in full view of the assembled crowd, and the haunting sound of a pututu would emerge, thanks to someone playing the conch shell instrument inside the structure. Indeed, in acoustical terms, the corridors serve as so-called wave guides, which guide sound waves farther than theyd otherwise travel, Kolar said.
More:
http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2012/02/haunting-sounds-at-an-ancient-pe.html?rss=1