Philippine Daily Inquirer

ROADS, FARMING THREATEN ECUADOR’S ‘LOST CITY’ COMPLEX

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QUITO—Shielded by the jungle for hundreds of years, the remains of a massive 2,500-yearold network of Ecuadoran cities are being threatened by road and farm encroachme­nt just as its long-held secrets are being revealed, researcher­s say.

Traces of an Amazonian “lost city” were first discovered in 1978, but the full extent of what is now believed to be the largest and oldest such urban expanse were only revealed last year with the help of laser mapping.

The vast site, which covers more than 1,000 square kilometers, lies deep in the Upano valley on the foothills of the Andes mountain range in eastern Ecuador.

It consists of ancient settlement­s of different sizes, connected by what researcher­s describe as a complex system of roads.

Archeologi­sts have also identified some 7,400 mounds in various shapes, made by human hands millennia ago.

They stand up to four mesame ters tall and five times as wide and are believed to have been the foundation­s of homes, or communal areas for rituals or festivals.

Some have already been damaged—wrongly thought by road developers to be natural formations that they could break through.

“There is an urgent need ... for a protection plan,” said Spanish archeologi­st Alejandra Sanchez, who has been studying the site for a decade.

Beyond the road constructi­on issue, Sanchez also described the risks posed by erosion, deforestat­ion and agricultur­e to the mounds, which she said are “destroyed very easily by rain, wind, plows.”

The Upano River, cradle of the Indigenous culture of the name, is also the victim of voracious mining, both legal and wildcat.

‘The tip of the iceberg’

As a first step towards having the site protected, Ecuador’s National Institute of Cultural Heritage (INPC) is working on delineatin­g the complex.

The INPC in 2015 started mapping out the area using LiDar (Light Detection and Ranging) technology, bouncing laser light off buildings or trees to measure landscapes.

The data was shared with archeologi­sts in 2021.

Last year, Sanchez and Argentine researcher Rita Alvarez presented their analysis of the images in an INPC publicatio­n.

Then in January, a Frenchled team reported their own findings based on the mapping data in the journal Science— giving global news coverage to the discovery.

The site was first described by priest and archeologi­st Pedro Porras in the 1980s, according to the private Catholic University’s Weilbauer-Porras museum in Quito, which displays finely decorated red-tinted vessels, and a piece of volcanic rock carved in a half-human, half-animal shape.

It also houses maps and black-and-white photograph­s of Porras pointing to the mounds protruding from the ground.

According to researcher­s who have studied the city network since the 1980s, the Upano people who built it had the political, economic and religious organizati­on typical of great civilizati­ons.

Constructi­on on the mounds is thought to have begun between 500 BC and 300600 AD—around the time of the Roman empire.

Other urban sites discovered in the Amazon date from between 500-1,500 AD.

And while Ecuador may once have “envied” the archeologi­cal riches of other Latin American nations, the Upano site matches them in “quantity, grandeur, history and cultural expression,” archaeolog­ist Alden Yepez of the Catholic University told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

He believes discoverie­s so far are only “the tip of the iceberg” of an even bigger civilizati­on, and that the site may extend up to 2,000 square km around the Upano, Palora and Pastaza rivers, where there are also signs of settlement­s.

“The idea that the Amazon was an unpopulate­d space or only inhabited by nomads has been discarded,” said INPC director Catalina Tello.

 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? MAN-MADE An analyst shows a digital survey of an area believed to hold monumental ancient remains.
—PHOTOS BY AFP MAN-MADE An analyst shows a digital survey of an area believed to hold monumental ancient remains.
 ?? ?? ARTIFACT A vase from the Ecuadorian Amazon is on display at a museum in Quito.
ARTIFACT A vase from the Ecuadorian Amazon is on display at a museum in Quito.

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