First City in the New World?
Peru's Caral suggests civilization emerged in the Americas 1,000 years earlier than experts believed
- By Smithsonian magazine
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2002, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
In 1996, Shady’s team began the mammoth task of excavating Pirámide Mayor, the largest of the pyramids. After carefully clearing away several millennia’s worth of rubble and sand, they unearthed staircases, circular walls covered with remnants of colored plaster, and squared brickwork. Finally, in the foundation, they found the preserved remains of reeds woven into bags, known as shicras. The original workers, she surmised, must have filled these bags with stones from a hillside quarry a mile away and laid them atop one another inside retaining walls, gradually giving rise to the city of Caral’s immense structures.
Shady knew that the reeds were ideal subjects for radiocarbon dating and could make her case. In 1999, she sent samples of them to Jonathan Haas at Chicago’s FieldMuseum and to Winifred Creamer at NorthernIllinoisUniversity. In December 2000, Shady’s suspicions were confirmed: the reeds were 4,600 years old. She took the news calmly, but Haas says he “was virtually in hysterics for three days afterward.” In the April 27, 2001, issue of the journal Science, the three archaeologists reported that Caral and the other ruins of the SupeValley are “the locus of some of the earliest population concentrations and corporate architecture in South America.” The news stunned other scientists. “It was almost unbelievable,” says Betty Meggers, an archaeologist at the Smithsonian Institution. “This data pushed back the oldest known dates for an urban center in the Americas by more than 1,000 years.”
What amazed archaeologists was not just the age but the complexity and scope of Caral. Pirámide Mayor alone covers an area nearly the size of four football fields and is 60 feet tall. A 30-foot-wide staircase rises from a sunken circular plaza at the foot of the pyramid, passing over three terraced levels until it reaches the top of the platform, which contains the remains of an atrium and a large fireplace. Thousands of manual laborers would have been needed to build such a mammoth project, not even counting the many architects, craftsmen, supervisors and other managers. Inside a ring of platform pyramids lies a large sunken amphitheater, which could have held many hundreds of people during civic or religious events. Inside the amphitheater, Shady’s team found 32 flutes made of pelican and condor bones. And, in April 2002, they uncovered 37 cornets of deer and llama bones. “Clearly, music played an important role in their society,” says Shady.
The perimeter of Caral holds a series of smaller mounds, various buildings and residential complexes. Shady discovered a hierarchy in living arrangements: large, well-kept rooms atop the pyramids for the elite, ground-level complexes for craftsmen, and shabbier outlying shantytowns for workers.
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Comments (4)
The New World in Archaeological terms is the Americas - North and South. In America, the native people had not created a completely sedentary lifestyle befor western influence arrived, so the first North American city would perhaps be Santa Domingo, founded around the turn of the 15th to 16th century I believe... Unless you want to count it from the start of the English setllers, in which case Jamestown would be your best bet, although lots of Europeans settled around the same time, and it depends on what you define as a city...
Posted by Jenny on January 27,2011 | 01:43 PM
this has nothing to do with the question i just asked-- ~What was the first city founded in the united states?~
Posted by jazmyn Ellis on October 5,2010 | 04:16 PM
True. But it did state it was the oldest found.
Posted by Leah Astor on February 13,2010 | 07:23 PM
it doesn't say that this was first place in the new world.
Posted by Cat on September 8,2009 | 05:53 PM