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The Paracas Zone Geoglyphs

 

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Paracas Peninsula • Pisco • Ica • Peru

Class 2 Geoglyph - Paracas Group 2  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

El Candelabro Geoglyph

   

In the ancient times, the area used to be the home of an ancient civilization called "Paracas", that existed during the pre Colombian era. The most famous remnant of this culture is the "El Candelabro" geoglyph, carved on a hillside on the way to Ballestas islands. The length of the "El Candelabro" geoglyph is 128 meters.

The amazing thing in the geoglyphs of Peru is the fact that they mostly survived intact.  The fact that the weather is minimal with almost no rain played an important role.  However, some geoglyphs were modified or erased by later cultures.

 

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Photo from the 1940's

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

 

Candelabro Specifications

  • Maximum length: 183 meters (600 feet)
  • Arm width between three and five meters (9 and 16 feet)
  • Depth of the furrow: between 1 and 1.2 meters. At this time, in some places the sand has covered some parts of the furrows, reducing the depth to about 30 centimetres.
  • The rectangle in the base: 20 by 14 meters (65 by 45 feet), with a crater in the middle of it.
  • By simple look one will think that the figure was done by emptying the sand and pressing between the walls.
  • There is no explanation, about how it still there and how the desert winds have not been able to erase it.
  • If you excavate in the surrounding area there is some white-yellow crystals common in the Paracas area.
  • Thousands of years ago the “Trident” could shine like a silver figure
  • Inclination with respect to the sea: 40 degrees
  • Google Earth’s Location: 13 48’17.00” S 76 22’03.47”W
 

Why So Many Photos?

The goal of our website is to present multiple views of each symbol for three reasons:

1) the lines are extremely difficult to photograph due to lighting conditions and the condition of the geoglyph itself,
2) to provide better context of the symbol, showing some of its surrounding area, and
3) because different views provide a better understanding of the style of design and perhaps a greater appreciation of the genius of the constructors.             more science »

  

 
For More Info About Peru & South America
Be sure to visit our bookshop »

 

  Map of the Paracas Candelabro location

 

 

 Paracas Peninsula

 

   
A map of Paracas. Click to see the map on MSN Maps & Directions
Link to an external website

 

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

 

click photo to enlarge

The Paracas coast

 

click photo to enlarge

 

 

click photo to enlarge

Just inland from the Paracas Bay is total sand dune desert

 

 

 

Drawing of the Paracas Candelabro

   

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

   

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Note the bounding box surrounding the Candelabro

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

 

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Just a short distance from the Pacific Ocean
amazingly it survived

The Great Dune Desert Of Paracas

 

Class 2 Geoglyphs - Paracas Group 1  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

New Paracas geoglyphs - Above is a new geoglyphs found near Paracas, in the Paracas Group 1 style.  In addition to the Nazca geoglyphs, unique geoglyphs can be found throughout the Ica department of Peru.  New geoglyphs are being discovered all the time!

A map of Ica Geoglyphs. Click to see the map on MSN Maps & Directions
Link to an external website

 

 

Class 2 Geoglyph - Precise Lines Group  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

geoglyph requires elevated viewing
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears damaged or partially destroyed
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Ica Broad Runway

   
Class 2 Geoglyph - Precise Lines Group  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

geoglyph requires elevated viewing
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Ica Grid

East of the town of Paracas lies a vast desert of giant sand dunes.  Here too, you can find ancient geoglyphs, such as these: Long Lines, a huge barely visible Broad Runway, and a Grid of lines similar to the Checkerboard of Cantalloc.

 

 

Class 2 Geoglyph - Paracas Group 1  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears substantially intact
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

Ica Bird

Class 2 Geoglyph - Imprecise Lines Group  

click here for more about our geoglyphic classification system

Geoglyph is visible from the ground
Geoglyph made by removing stones and/or desert pavement exposing soil underneath
Geoglyph appears damaged or partially destroyed
McGuinness Scale Class Two Geoglyph - imprecise object - context consistent

click photo to enlarge

A Long Line in the Ica Desert

  

 
For More Info About Peru & South America
Be sure to visit our bookshop »

 

The Paracas culture was an important Andean society between approximately 750 BCE and 100 CE that developed in the Paracas Peninsula, located in what today is the Paracas District of the Pisco Province in the Ica Region. Most of our information about the lives of the Paracas people comes from excavations at the large seaside Paracas necropolis, first investigated by the Peruvian archaeologist Julio Tello in the 1920s. The necropolis of Wari Kayan consisted of multitudes of large subterranean burial chambers, with an average capacity of about forty mummies. It is theorized that each large chamber would be owned by a specific family or clan, who would place their dead ancestors in the burial over the course of many generations. Each mummy was bound with cord to hold it in place, and then wrapped in many layers of incredibly intricate, ornate, and finely woven textiles. These textiles are now known as some of the finest ever produced in the history of Pre-Columbian Andean societies, and are the primary works of art by which Paracas is known. They had extensive knowledge of irrigation and water management.

 

 

 

 

  Paracas culture - Early Horizon, 300 -100 B.C.
This is a typical blackware jar in the Paracas "Cavernas" style.

 

   

Paracas geographically, 700 - 1 B.C., was a complex of cemeteries and habitation areas located on the arid Paracas Peninsula on the south coast of Peru. Paracas was discovered in 1925 by the famous Peruvian archaeologist, Julio C. Tello. Tello uncovered hundreds of mummy bundles wrapped in multiple layers of exquisitely decorated textiles, including mantles or shrouds. Sometimes more than sixty layers of textiles covered one mummy. These garments were elaborately embroidered in rich colors of red, dark blue, dark green and yellow. The textiles seem to have been made primarily for inclusion in the mummy bundles (rather than for use by the living).

By 300 B.C., Paracas weavers were using camelid fibre (probably alpaca from the highlands) to fashion tiny figures that decorated the borders of mantles. Paracas ceramics include some post-fired painted pots decorated in earth tones, and monochrome pottery in the shapes of plants and animals. Birds were prominent in the Paracas landscape and appear more frequently than any other animal in Paracas ceramics. This example depicts a falcon, an impressive creature, which is known for its unusual ability to seize other birds in mid-flight.

 

 

 

  Typical Paracas pottery

 

 

 

 

click photo to enlarge

  A Paracas Mummy

 

MUSEO REGIONAL DE ICA DEFORMACION CRANEO 07

click photo to enlarge

  MUSEO REGIONAL DE ICA: Deformed Cranium high fashion in the Paracas Culture

 

click photo to enlarge

How could separate culture of South and Central America arrive at the same cosmetic disfigurement?

 

click photo to enlarge

Not only did they deform but also engaged in brain surgery

 

 

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Pisco Province in the Ica Department of Peru

 

  

For More Information

Pisco was one of the most damaged areas of the 2007 Peru earthquake, at least 80% of all Pisco was destroyed, more than 400 people died and more than 1500 were injured. The earthquake had 8.0 magnitude in Richter scale

   

click photo to enlarge

Time scale for Paracas Geoglyph building

 

     
Paracas Worldview

Through ceremonies, societies celebrated their relationships with nature. Ancient Andean potters and weavers created colorful and exquisitely crafted objects reflecting the natural world. Ancient peoples revealed much about their beliefs, rituals, gods, rulers, flora, fauna, architecture and many other aspects of their lives. Designs from pots and textiles were also depicted on and metalwork.

The coastal environment isolated the early coastal cultures into separate independent units. People settled in coastal valleys, and used irrigation so they could cultivate the land. Settlements were concentrated around oases, where irrigation supported large agrarian populations. By 2500 B.C., the communal labour of village settlements had begun to build many large ceremonial buildings. As the centuries passed, monumental building projects became more and more elaborate.

Because coastal cultures were isolated, coastal art styles showed variety and uniqueness from one valley to the next. the Moche dominated the north coast between A.D. 1 and 800. These sea-oriented people are associated with a great art style and ideology. At the same time in the south, the Nasca chiefdoms, not politically unified like the Moche, left a permanent impression on their landscape. They are still famous today for their enormous geoglyphs (the "Nasca Lines" etched into the desert terrain), as well as their polychrome pottery and exquisite textiles.

 

   

click photo to enlarge
A Paracas Gold (Tumbaga) bird ornament - 16.3 X 24.7 cm
For more golden artifacts visit www.PrecolumbianGold.com

 

click photo to enlarge
Typical Paracas style figures

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Shell Necklace

 

click photo to enlarge
A typical Paracas textile

 

click photo to enlarge
A typical Paracas textile

 

click photo to enlarge

Paracas Obsidian Knife

 

RESERVA NACIONAL PARACAS 05

click photo to enlarge
Museo Julio Cesar Tello home to the largest collection of artifacts of the Paracas culture

 

  

Continue Your Exploration

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Ceramic Vessel - Wild Boar or Puma Design?

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Bowl

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Bowl

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Ceramic Double Spout & Bridge Vessel

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Ceramic Vessel - Animal effigy

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Ceramic Vessel - Animal effigy

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Ceramic Double Spout & Bridge Vessel

 

click photo to enlarge
Paracas Ceramic Spouted Vessel

 

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Image Quality

A note about image quality:  images of lines and symbols taken by air or from satellite images are adjusted to improve contrast and visibility of the artifact (line or symbol).  The results vary from image to image.  We apologize for the quality of some of the images, but it is due to the original source images, and the difficulty of photographing subject object.   

  

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