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Ancient temple discovered among Inca ruins in Peru

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Ancient temple discovered among Inca ruins in Peru

An ancient temple believed to have once housed idols and mummies, has been unearthed near an ancient Inca site in Cusco, Peru.

Washington, April 1 : An ancient temple believed to have once housed idols and mummies, has been unearthed near an ancient Inca site in Cusco, Peru.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the temple was discovered outside the ruins of a stone fortress known as Sacsayhuaman, which is thought to have been built by a pre-Inca culture called the Killke around 1100 A.D.

The fortress was later occupied and expanded by the Inca, experts say, and its ruins are now a UN World Heritage site.

Scientists, who found the temple, have rejected theories that the Sacsayhuaman complex was used strictly for military purposes.

According to Washington Camacho, director of the Sacsayhuaman Archaeological Park, "We believe that the temple we have found was used for ceremonial purposes."

"The temple covers some 2,700 square feet (250 square meters) and contains 11 rooms thought to have held idols and mummies," Camacho added.

The temple contained "funeral structures," according to Camacho, and was found next to "an enormous rocky formation" that researchers speculate was used as a "sacred place" prior to the Spanish conquest in the 16th century.

Christina Conlee, an anthropologist at Texas State University has also said that the team's theory about the site's ceremonial use seems valid, based on evidence cited in recent media reports.

"I think the discovery is potentially important, because although we know quite a bit about the later Inca Empire, the early Inca and origins of their culture are less well known," she said.

"The finding of an earlier temple near Sacsayhuaman seems to suggest this was a sacred area in pre-imperial times," she added.

Researchers also discovered an ancient footpath or roadway that Camacho said was built during the period of Inca occupation.

ANI

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