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Aconcagua mummy

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The Aconcagua mummy is an Incan capacocha mummy of a seven-year-old boy, dated to around the year 1500.[1] The mummy is well-preserved, due to the extreme cold and dry conditions of its high altitude burial location.[2] The frozen mummy was discovered by hikers in 1985 at 5,300 m (17,400 ft) on Aconcagua in Mendoza, Argentina.[1][2]

Discovery

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A map showing Aconcagua, a mountain in the Andes of the Mendoza Province, Argentina

In 1985, the body of the Aconcagua mummy was located by mountaineers at the bottom of Pirámide Mountain, the southwestern portion of the Aconcagua Mountain. Upon its discovery, the hikers contacted local authorities, allowing professionals to excavate the mummy.[1]

Scientific analysis

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Burial practices

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The Aconcagua mummy was buried inside a semicircular stone structure[3] and found covered in vomit, red pigment, and fecal remains.[4] The body was wrapped in textiles in a style derived from central coastal Peru.[5] Although the style of the textiles the boy was wrapped in are dated to coastal Peru, isotopic evidence suggests that the boy was likely raised in the Highlands.[4] Six statuettes were also found buried with the body.[1] The burial of the Aconcagua mummy contained a multitude of grave goods. Female capacocha mummies were often buried with more honorable and extravagant grave goods, which made the male burial of the Aconcagua distinct.[4]

Isotopic analysis

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When analyzing the isotopes of the Aconcagua mummy, scientists concentrated specifically on carbon, nitrogen and sulfur.[4] The analysis shows that in the year and a half before his death, his diet consisted primarily of maize, quinoa, capsicum, potatoes, and terrestrial meat. Before the child was chosen for the sacrifice, his diet was primarily marine-based.[4] The presence of achiote was also found inside his stomach and colon.[5] Because of the conflicting results of the isotopes suggesting the child was from the summits but survived off a marine based diet, researchers tried to pinpoint the ethnicity of the child. In this attempt, a hair sample from the mummy was used. Unfortunately, this isotopic analysis yielded little information about the child's ethnicity, so researchers concluded he was likely from Pacific regions ranging from Southern Peru to central Chile.[4]

Capacocha

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The Capacocha was the ritual sacrifices of young boys and girls in the Inca Empire. Those chosen to be sacrificed were seen as the most serene children in the Empire, making them worthy of sacrifice.[6][1] The most substantial requirement to be chosen for the sacrifice, was to be a virgin. This alludes to the serenity and perfection of the children and infants picked to be tributed to the gods. For a year before the sacrifice, the children were fed the most prestigious diets. The diets revolved solely around maize and charqui, meat from a llama.[7] Many parents felt sorrow when forced to give up their children to the sacrifice, but were forbidden to show grief during the event. Others felt the sacrifice was a great honor and even offered their children to the gods.[7] These children faced their demise at the end of a long trek to the summits of the Andes, where they experienced blunt head trauma causing them to die, or they were buried alive.[4] Each child was often buried with a variety of grave goods, as an offering to the gods. The funerary goods buried along the children depended on the importance of the shrine and sometimes even contained animals buried alongside the children.[8]

Archaeogenetics

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In 2015, DNA was extracted from a 350 mg sample from one of his lungs.[1] His mtDNA lineage belongs to a subgroup of Haplogroup C1b, the previously unidentified C1bi (i for Inca).[1] His mtDNA lineage contains 10 distinct mutations from C1b.[1] The researchers determined that Haplogroup C1bi likely arose around 14,300 years ago.[1] An individual from the Wari Empire was found to be a match for this previously unidentified haplogroup.[1][2] In 2018, researchers sequenced the genome of the Aconcagua mummy from a 100 mg sample from one of his lungs.[9] His Y-DNA lineage belongs to Haplogroup Q-M3.[10] His specific Y-DNA haplogroup is closest matched by the Choppca people from Huancavelica, a Quechua speaking population, and clusters closer to modern Quechua speaking peoples than Aymara speaking peoples.[10] Overall, the genome of the Aconcagua mummy clusters with modern Andean populations.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Gómez-Carballa & Catelli 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Wade 2015.
  3. ^ Ceruti 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Faux 2012.
  5. ^ a b Cassman 2007, p. 144.
  6. ^ Andrushko, Valerie A.; Buzon, Michele R.; Gibaja, Arminda M.; McEwan, Gordon F.; Simonetti, Antonio; Creaser, Robert A. (2011-02-01). "Investigating a child sacrifice event from the Inca heartland". Journal of Archaeological Science. 38 (2): 323–333. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2010.09.009. ISSN 0305-4403.
  7. ^ a b Rubio, María Del Carmen Martín (2009-12-31). "La cosmovisión religiosa andina y el rito de la Capacocha". Investigaciones Sociales. 13 (23): 187–201. doi:10.15381/is.v13i23.7229. ISSN 1818-4758.
  8. ^ Bray, Tamara L.; Minc, Leah D.; Ceruti, María Constanza; Chávez, José Antonio; Perea, Ruddy; Reinhard, Johan (2005-03-01). "A compositional analysis of pottery vessels associated with the Inca ritual of capacocha". Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 24 (1): 82–100. doi:10.1016/j.jaa.2004.11.001. hdl:11336/94308. ISSN 0278-4165.
  9. ^ Moreno-Mayar et al. 2018, p. 12 (Supplementary).
  10. ^ a b Salas et al. 2018.
  11. ^ Moreno-Mayar et al. 2018, p. 21 (Supplementary).

Bibliography

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