Chattanooga Times Free Press

Peru gas workers unearth centuries of history in Lima’s soil

- BY FRANKLIN BRICEÑO

LIMA, Peru — For nearly two decades, workers for a company building gas lines across Peru’s capital have found themselves unearthing a treasure trove of history.

On one recent afternoon, a team came across four burials accompanie­d by ceramics from a pre-Incan civilizati­on. Two years earlier, they found the bodies of farmers who had been among the first wave of Chinese immigrants in the 19th century.

“Lima literally sits atop a cultural bank,” with one layer of history atop another, said Alexis Solis, one of 40 archaeolog­ists who work for the Calidda national gas company that is installing lines across the city.

The cooperatio­n is a step forward for preservati­on in a metropolis whose rapid growth over the past century led to the destructio­n of many important sites.

Gas line worker Segundo Chávez last year found the body of a child inside a base — a burial characteri­stic of the pre-Incan Chancay people who flourished from about 1200 to 1470 — and he recalled how his shouts of discovery attracted nearby residents from their houses.

“It was an ancient burial, 80 centimeter­s deep,” Chavez said as he looked at two other recent discoverie­s — still unrecovere­d — in a ditch in a street in the Puente Piedra neighborho­od: bones of an adult in a huge vase and the those of a baby found with a ceramic figure of a “Cuchimilco,” a sort of guide through the world of the dead in the Chancay culture.

The Colombia-based company said it has installed about 6,000 miles of natural gas lines across Lima over the past 16 years, and it’s reported about 300 archaeolog­ical finds, some of them 2,000 years old.

It said it has spent about $2 million on the archaeolog­ical effort.

Peruvian law requires that archaeolog­ical discoverie­s be reported and turned over to the Culture Ministry.

But some developers have been cavalier about following the law and preserving the nation’s history.

In 2013, workers for real estate developers destroyed a 4,500-year-old pyramid-shaped structure on the edges of the city.

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