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Introduction
In recent years, archaeologistsand anthropologists have
become increasingly aware of the dynamic and heterogeneous aspect of early complex societies. Research outside
large centers and core areas reveals insights into the variability that characterizesmore peripheralsociocultural formations and underscores the importance of their study for
understanding broader, supra-regionaldevelopmental trajectories (Schortman and Urban 1994; Schwartz and Falconer 1994).
In the Central Andes, scholars have applied different
models to explore inter-regional interactions and cultural
variability(Burger and Matos Mendieta 2002; Lau 2005;
Stanish 2003). Most attention has been given to polities
and the social and economic asymmetries between centers
and client communities. Archaeologists have emphasized
the role of political subjugation in the development of social complexity, exploring many aspects of core initiatives
and inter-regionalinteractions, such as territorialconquest
(Moseley et al. 1991), imperial expansion (Goldstein
2005), and religious proselytism (Patterson 1968). Meanwhile, case studies of groups outside or bordering core areas, criticalin shedding light on the unity and heterogeneity of prehistoricAndean societies, have remained a low researchpriority.
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Figure 1. Map of Peru locating the principal coastal river valleys and the archaeologicalsites mentioned in
the text.
3 of 23
tecture at Huambacho and discuss its implications for understandingthe nature and affiliationsof public ceremonial settings in the lower Nepena Valley.
The findings at Huambacho indicate the existence, by
the beginning of the Early Horizon, of new architectural
conventions inspired by the coastal Initial Period tradition.
Strong differenceswith earlierreligious buildings, however, suggest important changes experienced by Early Horizon groups. I argue that Huambacho architecturalcanons
developed as an alternativeto and in relativeisolation from
the Chavin interaction sphere, thus forcing revaluation of
culturalvariabilityduring the Early Horizon and the characterof religion, authority,and interaction in earlyAndean
civilization.
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Figure 2. Map of the Nepena Valley with the location of the sites mentioned in text. The inset shows
rivervalleys of the north-centralcoast of Peru.
5 of 23
tal of 363 sites in the valley, more than 100 dating to the
Early Horizon. Based on surface evidence, their research
mainly focused on early cultural developments in order to
position sites chronologically and understand settlement
patterns, ceramics, and architecturaltraits. They suggested
the existence of at least two distinct phases of Early Horizon development in Nepena (Proulx 1985: 221-235).
While the validity of their chronological framework
awaits confirmation from excavated stratigraphic data,
Proulx and Daggett's work allows the identification of distinct types of architecture.A "megalithic"type of architecture (Daggett 1983), mainly distributed in the upper section of the Nepena Valley, is best exemplified at ridge-top
sites, such as Kushipampa, Huancarpon, and Quisque
(fig. 2). At Kushipampa, for example, large enclosure
structures were made of finely cut stone blocks, largerthan-human lintels, and double-faced walls (Proulx 1968:
96-99, 1985: 231). Daggett attributed at least three complexes of stone-wall enclosures to the Early Horizon:
Caylanin the middle valley, and Samanco and Huambacho
in the lower valley (Daggett 1984; Richard Daggett, personal communication 1999). Many features distinguish
them from megalithic architecture, notably the extensive
use of mud mortar,the smallerscale of the stonework, and
their valley floor location (Daggett 1984: 213-218). Surface evidence collected by Daggett shows a strong connection with similar complexes surveyed by Donald Collier
(1960), Donald Thompson (1961), and Shelia and
Thomas Pozorski (1987a) in the neighboring Casma Valley. For example, the sites of San Diego and PampaRosario
appearto share the same architecturallayout. Indeed, test
pit excavations have dated the sites to the Early Horizon
(Pozorski and Pozorski 1987a: 51-70). Apparent differences from Initial Period mounds like Las Haldas, Sechin
Alto, and Pampa de las Llamas Moxeke, led the Pozorskis
to suggest that the EarlyHorizon in Casma was markedby
a major culturaldisruption. They go further and argue that
Casma was conquered by highland invaders (Pozorski
1987: 25-28; Pozorski and Pozorski 1987a: 118-119; Pozorski and Pozorski 1987b: 45). This interpretationis also
used by Daggett to conclude that "Nepena was essentially
unoccupied at the start of the Early Horizon and... subsequently settled by highlanders"(Daggett 1987: 78).
While the decline of Initial Period coastal centers and
the origins of subsequent changes have provoked many
discussions (Burger 1992: 184-190), most archaeologists
agree that coastal societies experienced a deep social, and
possibly environmental, crisis (Elera 1998; Onuki 2001;
Pozorski and Pozorski 1987a). Burger (1992) and Wilson
(1988), for instance, see the extensive use of ridges and the
presence of several defensive fortifications as an index of
the instabilitytriggered by the collapse of Initial Period societies centered in the Casma Valley. Defensive structures,
they argue, represent the most important focus of public
building efforts during the Early Horizon (Burger 1992:
188; Wilson 1988: 104).
Field Research
The Proyecto Huambacho (2003-2004) was undertaken to better understandEarlyHorizon societies in the lower Nepena, especially their architecture and sociocultural
correlates. Many sites of that time period have been identified on the north-central coast, but very little evidence
comes from excavations such as those at Huambacho.
Large-scalesurveys (e.g., Wilson 1988), test pits, and limited excavations (e.g., Pozorski and Pozorski 1987a) were
preferred over extensive horizontal clearings and detailed
architecturalplans, making it difficult for archaeologiststo
interpret the architecture, internal spatial organization,
function, and dates of these sites (Moore 1996: 227).
TheSiteofHuambaeho
Huambacho, also known as Huambacho Viejo, occupies a flat sandy plain (Pampa el Cementerio or Pampa del
Inca) on the southern margin of the lower Nepena. Bordered to the south by hills, it is located 8 km from the Pacific shoreline and at approximately65 masl. The site lies
strategicallyat the limit of the cultivated valley floor and
consists of two distinct architecturalcompounds (the Main
Compound and the North Compound) connected by a
wall 75 m long. The two compounds originally covered an
area of more than 12 ha, but the recent encroachment of
cultivated fields has totally destroyed the North Compound.
A modern irrigation canal runs on the nw edge of the
site and has unfortunately destroyed part of the architecture. Some 80 m west of the canal runs an acequia (Rio
Viejo), a seasonal water source which probably represented the nw limit of the EarlyHorizon settlement. To the sw,
the site is delimited by a modern cemetery adjacentto the
Panamericanhighway, located some 200 m from the Main
Compound. Across the Panamerican highway is Cerro
Popo, a granite hill of conical shape which stands almost
200 masl. Structuresarepresent on top of the hill, but their
relation to the Huambacho site is unknown.
The Main Compound, which was the focus of the
Proyecto Huambacho, covers an areaof 8.4 ha (400 x 210
m) and is composed of a complex arrangementof courtyards, corridors, and raised mounds (fig. 3). These structures are remarkablefor their diversity in size, quality of
construction and finish, and internal design and complexity. Huambacho is dominated by two large sunken plazas
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andexcavationunits.
Figure3. Mapof the MainCompoundat Huambachoshowingarchitecture
Methods
Most structures at Huambacho are still visible on the
surface. They are partially buried under a layer of windblown sand, but it was possible to make a plan of them. Architectural details such as entryways and pillars were subsequently added to the plan after excavation.Based on surface information, the Main Compound was divided into
five operative sectors: South (SS), Central (CS), North
(NS), North Extension (NE), and Huaca-A (HA) (fig. 3).
Distinct rooms were identified and given an area number
followed by the sector's abbreviation (e.g., A-l/CS for area
one of the Central Sector). For each sector, a distinct numbering sequence was used (e.g., A-2/SS and A-2/NE). Excavation units, delimited in order to investigate specific architectural features, were oriented after the site layout
(N41E).
A total of 29 units were excavated at Huambacho during 23 weeks of fieldwork over two seasons. Excavations
sampled an area of approximately4500 sq m and allowed
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analyticno.
Material
uqi2C
correction 14CyearsB.P.* One-sigmarangef
Two-sigmarangef
Maize(cobs) -11.6
197085
1850 60 a.d. 80-240
a.d. 20-340
Huaca-A,A-5/HA,Unit 23, Burial8
1960 40 20 b.c.-a.d. 110 50 b.c.-a.d. 130
197084+ Maize(cobs) -10.7
Huaca-A,A-l/HA, Unit 19, Burial6
2250 40 390-200 B.C.
400-200 B.C.
197087+ Maize(cobs) -12.3
Huaca-A,A-7/HA,Unit 26, Floor-2
Maize
185372
CentralSector,A-4/CS,
-9.1
2350 70 760-250 B.C.
800-200 B.C.
Unit 4, fill beneathFloor-1
197088
Charcoal
-23.0
2360 60 760-370 B.C.
800-200 B.C.
Huaca-A,A-5/HA,
Unit 23, beneathramp(Floor-2)
Plantmaterial -10.2
NorthExtension,A-l/NE (Plaza-B),
197089
2360 60 760-370 B.C.
800-200 B.C.
Unit 25, fill beneathFloor-1
Manioc
NorthExtension,A-l/NE (Plaza-B),
197090
-24.1
2370 70 760-380 B.C.
800-200 B.C.
Unit 25, fill beneathFloor-1
197091
Charcoal
-25.3
2370 70 760-380 B.C.
800-200 B.C.
Huaca-A,A-10/HA,Unit 19, Floor-2
Plantmaterial -9.8
2410 50 760-400 B.C.
CentralSector,A-3/CS,Unit 18, fill beneathFloor-1 185375
770-390 B.C.
Floor-1
Maize
Unit
185374
NorthExtension,A-2/NE,
-9.1
2420 60 760-400 B.C.
770-390 B.C.
15,
(cobs)
185373
Plantmaterial -23.6
CentralSector,A-3/CS,Unit 4, fill beneathFloor-1
2480 60 770-510 B.C.
790-410 B.C.
Maize(stalks) -12.0
2490 70 770-510 B.C.
790-410 B.C.
Huaca-A,A-7/HA,Unit 21, fill underneathFloor-1 197086
* Conventionaluncalibrated
correctionsapplied).
radiocarbon
years(13C/12C
datafromStuiveret al. 1998.
t Calendar
yearscalibrated
usingthe OxCalv3.9 software(BronkRamsey2001, 2003) afteratmospheric
MassSpectrometer.
XAnalyzedwithAccelerator
the investigation of 50 distinct rooms or areas.This represents more than 60% of the total number of rooms estimated for the Main Compound (ca. 80). Excavations focused on the horizontal clearing of specific architectural
structures in order to understand their organization and
layout. Layers of sand and debris were removed with the
objective of clearing occupation floors to allow the recording of architectureand associated artifacts.
At Huambacho, the bulk of the Early Horizon occupation floors were found less than a meter below the surface.
In most areas,they were set up directly on the sandypampa (plain) and were partially destroyed, especially around
the pillarsand the walls. The general stratigraphicsequence
from the top was windblown sand (ca. 15-20 cm), debris
of collapsed Early Horizon structures (a layer of stone,
mud mortar, and sand; ca. 50-100 cm), sand, dirt, and remains associated with occupational floors (ca. 10-15 cm),
and clay floors (ca. 5 cm). Contexts were carefullyexcavated and sifted using i/8-inch screen (ca. 3 mm). Test pits below the floor level were made to investigate the building
techniques. In the case of raised structures, excavations
were continued beneath the floor level in order to sample
construction fill materialsand techniques, as well as to document possible superimposed structures.On one occasion,
a superposition of three occupational floors was discovered. When natural or cultural layers could be delineated
within the architecturalfill stratum, their division was followed. Otherwise, or if greater accuracywas needed, the
fill was divided into arbitrarylayers of 10 cm.
Excavation Results
Excavationsat Huambacho yielded representativesam-
Architecture
at Huambacho
The architecturedemonstrates the existence of well-defined building conventions. The majorityof wall structures
were constructed of granitic stone laid in silt-clay mortar.
The stones were likely quarriedfrom outcrops of the nearby Cerro Popo hill located some 350 m sw of the site.
Many stones feature a rectangularnotch removed from one
of the corners. In situ examples show that these notched
stones were laid in the corners of walls and pillars. The
foundations of the walls were set directly in the sand and
gravel of the valley plain. Walls themselves were consistently erected following the so-called "orthostatic technique" using stone slabs, or orthostats, set upright at the
base of a structureto form the lower section (Fleming, Honour, and Pevsner 1999: 416). The technique has been reported in coastal Peru in pre- and post-EarlyHorizon con-
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Figure 4. Decorative clay cones discovered on top of the east outer wall-platform of PlazaA. Note the step motifs sculpted into the bases of the cones (scale in the photo is 20 cm).
metric designs. The conical parts are poorly finished; imprints of canes and stone can often be identified on them.
Excavation results indicate that decorative cones were inserted in specific sections of wall and roof structuresin such
a way as to allow their motifs to be seen. More than 200
specimens of these decorative clay cones were recovered
during the excavation of collapsed structures (fig. 4).
The stonework at Huambacho shows a high degree of
formal continuity and, even though isolated examples of
roughly made walls were identified, good workmanship is
a characteristicof the architecture.Little variationwas noted in the dimensions, the orientation, or the organization
of structures. The use of a measurement system was confirmed by the discovery, in A-3/HA, of wooden stakes still
in place at the base of certainwalls and pillars. Similar survey devices have been reported from other early coastal
sites, where they were apparentlyused to align structures
and guide masons in their work (Grieder 1975: 102-103).
The high quality of the stonework at Huambacho contrasts
sharply with the domestic structures and habitation
dwellings documented at other EarlyHorizon sites such as
Las Haldas (Grieder 1975: 103; Matsuzawa 1978) and
San Diego (Pozorski and Pozorski 1987b: 54), suggesting
that the Main Compound at Huambacho represented an
architecturalcomplex of special significance for the local
population.
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ArchitecturalUnits
In terms of its internal spatial organization, Huambacho was organized as a complex of repeating, standardized
rectangulararchitecturalunits. In particular,it appearsthat
the builders had a strong understanding of architectural
conventions which they expressed in distinct and highly
recognizable room types with rigid internal spatial organization. The access system is one of the most striking examples of rigid planning; all excavatedexamples of entrances
were located in the corners of rooms. Moreover, entryways
were frequently baffled and/or complemented by a narrow
passageway.When necessary, wooden posts and/or stone
walls were built to prohibit visual access to certain areas
and to make the interior activities invisible to outsiders.
This helped to insulate the spaces from wind, sand, and
sound. It also illustratesan intention to control the movements and the flow of people within the Main Compound.
Architecturalunits at Huambacho are rectangular.Most
units are contiguous and typically organized as patio
groups with interior colonnades. The apparent absence of
typical, independent dwelling units with benches, sleeping
areas,or food processing facilities argues for the non-residential nature of most buildings. The Huambacho com-
munity could have extended outside the immediate vicinity of the Main Compound public ceremonial core, however. Unfortunately, Huambacho has suffered from modern
human activities and most of the surroundings are under
cultivation. Parallelscan nevertheless be drawn with other
early coastal centers. For instance, at Montegrande, a Cupisnique site in the upper JequetepequeValley,excavations
led by Michael Tellenbach(1986) have shown that the ceremonial core of the site was surrounded by fine elite residential architecturewhile commoner habitations, made of
perishable materials, were established on the periphery of
the site.
At Huambacho, four room types could be recognized:
colonnaded patio rooms, restricted storage facilities,
"backrooms,"and sunken plazas. A total of 18 colonnaded
patio rooms were excavated. The data indicate very rigid
spacing with colonnades of rectangularpillarsaveraging60
x 50 cm set at a distance of approximately2 m from the interior faces of the walls (fig. 5). These pillars supported a
roof structuremade of perishablematerialsas evidenced by
the numerous cane imprints found in the debris of collapsed roofs. Patio rooms were unroofed in the center and
one to four sides were roofed. The size of the patios varies
10 of 23
Figure 6. Plan reconstruction of the Central Sector showing the architecturalorganization of Plaza-A and
the Main Platform Complex. Line thicknesses are indicative of wall thicknesses.
substantially.Some are small and made for only a few people at most (e.g., A-12/CS, 36 sq m), while larger ones
could have accommodated large numbers of people (e.g.,
A-2/NE, 1178 sq m). Finally, some of the patio rooms
were raised, creating different patio levels. This particular
building technique was widespread in ancient coastal Peru
and consists of filling retaining chambers with various
types of materialsin order to elevate buildings.
Storage facilities are representedby small rooms located
next to or directly within a patio room. These restricted
spaces were probably accessed from above as no entrances
could be identified. In one of these storage rooms (A2A/SS), eight gourd containerswere found; they were likely used to store, carry, and serve food and drink. Also,
smallerrectangularchambers, termed "backrooms,"are located at the back of patio rooms. The backrooms sampled
(e.g., A-4A/CS, A-6/HA) are each rectangularwith a single
access; the absence of pillars and restricted size suggest a
roof. The relativelocation of backrooms argues for a function complementary to the activities conducted in patio
rooms. Finally, two sunken plazas, organized with "outer
wall-platforms" (see below) surrounding a sunken area,
were the focus of public ceremonial gatherings within the
Main Compound. The monumental outer wall-platforms
were floored, roofed, and colonnaded with rectangularpil-
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11
Figure 7. View from the west of the ne corner of the sunken area of Plaza-A showing the outer wallplatforms, inset staircase,and low-relief clay friezes. Note the pairs of niches at the base of the pillars.
recovered from the sand fill; since later architecturaladditions at Huambacho contained large amounts of refuse,
this suggests Plaza-A was built prior to the occupation of
the site. Plaza-As wall-platformswere topped with a floor,
and covered with a roof structure. The roof was made of
perishablematerial, as evidenced by the remains of wooden beams, fragments of canes, cane imprints, and a row of
supporting rectangularpillars averaging 70 x 60 cm. Surface survey revealedtwo pairs of inset stairwayson the east
and west walls connecting the top of the walls with the
sunken area. One staircasewas excavatedin the ne corner
(fig. 7); it is 1.3 m wide and composed of seven steps, each
step averaging 55 cm in depth. The staircasewas erected
with finely cut stone slabs laid horizontally in the mortar
and covered with white plaster. It is well-preserved, even
though the edges of the steps show traces of use.
A pair of graffiti depicting linear hatched designs face
each other inside the staircase (fig. 8: k-l). Other examples of graffiti were collected from fragments of plaster
from the collapsed areas of Plaza-A (fig. 8: a-g). Among
these, various anthropomorphic and zoomorphic representations were noted, such as male anthropomorphs and
bird figures. Graffiti have been reported from other early
coastal sites in Peru such as Huaca Lucia and Huaca
Soledad in the La Leche Valley (Shimada 1981: 420-421,
1986: 177-179) and Cardal in the Lurin Valley (Burger
and Salazar-Burger1991: 281, fig. 4) where they were interpreted as evidence for ceremonial activities.
A series of rectangularpillars embedded some 50 cm in
the sand substrate were set into the floor. Pairs of rectangular niches were found near the base of each of the pillars
(fig. 7). The niches transectthe width of each pillar,creating "holes"through the supporting structures.Their exact
function and significance are unknown, but they could
have been decorative.
The excavation of the east and north walls yielded evidence of clay relief friezes. On the upper section of the interior wall, directly facing the sunken area, a series of stepand-rectanglemotifs were sculpted in low-relief. Study of
the west and south walls indicates that this decorativefrieze
ran around the entire sunken area.The destruction of most
of the upper section of the wall makes it impossible to
know if the designs were repeated or were part of a more
complex pattern. The iconographic content of the frieze
matches the designs from decorative clay cones found during the excavation of the debris of the collapsed walls, pillars, and roof structure of Plaza-A (fig. 4). Most of these
cones were found between the colonnades and the exterior
wall, suggesting they adorned either the exterior wall, the
roof structure, or both. Additionally, we discovered sections of collapsed walls with in situ specimens. Thus, the
motifs depicted on the cones were probably organized as a
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Figure 8. Graffitidiscovered in the debris of the collapsed walls of Plaza-A (A-G) and Huaca-A (H, I),
and in situ on a Plaza-Bpillar (J), and inside the ne staircaseof Plaza-A (K-L).
throughout the complex, were relativelybare but some artifacts were recovered. For example, directlyon the floor of
the north wall-platform, a broken black monochrome stirrup-spout bottle was collected (fig. 10). The lip of the bottle was thickened, and exhibited highly polished areas alternating with zones of punctation. This zone punctate
type of decoration has also been reported at other Early
Horizon sites on the north-central coast (Proulx 1985:
191-192, 194-196), as well as from Cupisnique Phase
sites on the north coast (Larco 1941; Pozorski 1983).
Complete specimens of this type of vessel are generallyencountered in funerarycontexts.
Inside the sunken area,evidence for the consumption of
food and drink came from the discovery of a broken neckless jar or olla with a lateralpouring spout. This rarevessel
type was also documented at San Diego in the CasmaValley (Pozorski and Pozorski 1987a: 57, fig. 33). In addition,
directly at the base of the ne staircase,two gourd receptacles were found on the floor of the sunken area.
MAIN PLATFORM COMPLEX
13 of 23
13
Figure 9. Isometric reconstruction of Plaza-A.The inset shows the organization of clay friezes, niched
pillars, and decorative cones. Entrances and roof structuresare not shown.
from the construction fill of the raised areas, which suggests that, like Plaza-A, the Main Platform Complex was
built prior to the occupation of the site. Three carbon samples were collected from layers of vegetal remains contained in the architecturalfill and dated to 2480 60 b.p.
(Beta-185373), 2410 50 b.p. (Beta-185375), and 2350
70 b.p. (Beta-185372).
The Main Platform Complex provides important data
on the complexity of access patterns and spatial subdivisions at Huambacho. Accessed through A-10/CS, the
Main Platform Complex was subdivided into at least two
sub-compounds (fig. ii). One of these, Sub-CompoundA, located to the east of A-10/CS, is composed of at least
seven contiguous colonnaded patio rooms, while SubCompound-B is a series of agglutinated rooms which ultimately lead to A-3/CS, the most visible raisedfeature.This
room could hold few individuals and it is likely that the
Main Platform Complex represented a more private area
than the large Plaza-A. In contrast to Plaza-A, the colon-
14 of 23
naded patios here lack interior architecturalornamentation, such as low-relief friezes, decorative clay cones, or
niches. In fact, the only evidence of wall decoration comes
from the excavation of A-13/NS where fragments of lowrelief clay modeling depicting zigzag designs were discovered in the debris of the collapsed north facade of A-3/CS.
This location suggests, in contrast to Plaza-A, that the decorative features of the Main Platform Complex were designed to be seen from outside, ratherthan from inside.
plaza-b
Plaza-B (A-l/NE) is a rectangularsunken court located
in the North Extension Sector (fig. 3) that provides important data on Huambacho's architecturaldynamics. Sections of its walls have been partly destroyed and it presently measures 56 x 59 m. Plaza-Bis adjacentto a complex of
courtyardsto the east and appearsto have constituted a discrete sub-compound, distinct from Plaza-A and the Main
Platform Complex. Excavation results demonstrate an initial occupation of the North Extension Sector coeval with
the construction of the Central Sector, while Plaza-B rep-
resents a later addition. Radiometric evidence dated the occupation of A-2A/NE, a patio room east of Plaza-B, at
2420 60 b.p. (Beta-185374). The sample came from a
pit filled with maize cobs. Carbon samples of manioc
(Manihotesculenta)and maize coeval with the construction
of the outer wall-platformsof Plaza-Bdated to 2370 70
b.p. (Beta-197090) and 2360 60 b.p. (Beta-197089), respectively.
The layout of Plaza-Bparallelsthat of Plaza-A.The outer wall-platforms are roughly the same width as those of
Plaza-A and the sunken area was accessed through two
pairs of aligned inset staircases.Our excavationsat Plaza-B
documented two superimposed phases of construction and
also recovered Early Horizon refuse materials used as fill.
Colonnades of rectangular pillars were excavated on the
south and east walls (fig. 5). The south pillars each had a
single niche near their base reminiscent of those found in
Plaza-A. A graffito depicting a sub-circular shape with
cross-hatchedlines (fig. 8: j) was also noted on one of the
south pillars.Overall, the materialevidence recoveredfrom
Plaza-Bsuggests another large enclosed public space, albeit
smaller and slightly later than Plaza-A. This architectural
pattern of adding and shifting public ceremonial spaces
contrastswith earlierceremonial centers, where renovation
programs often focused on "mounding" a single monument over a long period of time or, in other words, by
erecting larger buildings on top of previous ones.
HUACA-A COMPLEX
Investigations to the north of the Main Compound revealed another complex of raised patio rooms and corridors, called Huaca-A (fig. 3); it is similarto the Main Platform Complex. Fieldwork at Huaca-A highlighted Huambacho's distinctive renovation programs and provided important data on site chronology. Ancient burial practices,
recent looting, and agriculturalactivitieshave damaged the
architecturalremains. As a result, large amounts of shell
refuse and broken ceramics were found on the surface in
this area (see also Proulx 1968: 137). Also, a concentration
of large broken domestic jars some 90 m nw of Huaca-A
was observed. Excavations at Huaca-A cleared more than
400 sq m and revealed a complex building sequence characterized by a series of rebuilding and reuse episodes (fig.
12). Three superimposed construction episodes, which we
have provisionally divided into Early, Middle, and Late
Phases, were identified.
During the Early Phase, Huaca-A was dominated by a
centralroom, A-l/HA. EarlyPhase occupation floors were
usuallyvery well preservedand buried under large amounts
of refuse material,in some places more than 2 m thick. Several test pits excavated below Early Phase floors indicate
15 of 23
15
Figure 11. Isometric reconstruction of the Main Platform Complex. The inset shows the access sequence
for Sub-Compounds A and B.
that structureswere built directly on the sterile sand stratum. With the exception of A-3/HA no examples of colonnaded architecture were documented from Early Phase
contexts. In the sw section, adjacent to patio room A3/HA, a restrictedrectangularroom (A-8/HA) measuring
approximately2.50 x 1.50m is interpreted as a storage facility.
Most EarlyPhase occupation floors were found without
significant traces of activity. One exception was a concentration of ash on the floor of the centralroom. The ash deposit, which provided a charcoalsample, belonged to a layer of refuse and corresponds to the abandonment of the
Early Phase floor and the first burying episode or Middle
Phase modifications of the Huaca-A Complex. The charcoal sample yielded an age of 2370 70 b.p. (Beta197091). The result is largely consistent with an age of
2360 60 b.p. (Beta-197088) obtained from charcoal
found beneath an access ramp that was built as part of the
Middle Phase remodeling of A-5/HA (fig. 13).
Middle Phase constructions at the Huaca-A Complex
began with raising the height of A-l/HA, and the building
of an access ramp on its east flank. Floors of the structures
were raised some 2.5 m and walls and rectangularpillars
were erectedon top of the architecturalfill, superseding the
Early Phase structures.The raised platform areawas divided into distinct spaces. A-l/HA became a colonnaded patio with a backroom, A-6/HA, directly to its south. During the Middle Phase, A- 1/HA, A-6/HA, and A-4/HA represented the highest structures of the Huaca-A Complex.
Excavation of A-3/HA, located directly south of A-6/HA
and A-4/HA, provided evidence that the south facade of
the raised complex was decorated with painted murals. In
the debris of the collapsed walls, red and yellow pigments
were observed on fragments of wall plaster. Evidence of
painting was also found on sections of collapsed walls. Incisions in association with the paintings were noted and a
step-and-fret motif was identified. In addition, graffiti
were depicted on wall plaster fragments from A-3/HA
(fig. 8: h-i), a large colonnaded patio linking the area
with the rest of the Main Compound.
At the Huaca-A Complex, the Late Phase architecture
was badly preserved. Surviving architecturalremains suggest that Late Phase remodeling principally involved raising the height of rooms A-5/HA and A-7/HA to enlargeA1/HA. The elevated structures of the Huaca-A Complex,
by the Last Phase, came to cover more than 800 sq m.
For the most part, radiocarbon evidence corroborates
the building sequence inferred from the architecturalevi-
16 of 23
Figure 12. Map of Huaca-A Complex showing the three construction phases and the carbon sample findspots.
dence. Excavation of the corridor north of A-l/HA yielded a sample of maize cobs dated to 2250 40 b.p. (Beta197087). The cobs were secured from a layer of sand
trapped between the Middle Phase floor and the Late
Phase construction fill. The date is consistent with two
dates obtained from Middle Phase construction fill and indicates that the corridorwas still in use when Middle Phase
modifications took place. Further, a maize sample from a
more superficialsection of the fill in A-7/HA yielded an additional date of 2490 70 b.p. (Beta-197086).
likely to have begun before 800 cal B.C.,nor continued after 200 cal B.C.This interpretation was substantiated by
the discovery of intrusive Salinarperiod burials at HuacaA dated 50 cal b.c.-cal a.d. 130 and cal a.d 20-340
(table i). A time gap of almost 200 years thus appearsbetween the last Early Horizon occupation and the first reoccupations of the site.
At Huambacho, some small storage facilities and backrooms were documented, but the bulk of the architecture
consists of colonnaded patios. The excavationof severalof
these patios produced little evidence of domestic activities,
and occupation floors were for the most part bare of artifacts. In contrast, refuse deposits at Plaza-B and Huaca-A
yielded large amounts of serving vessels, ceramicpanpipes,
and culinary remains that point to the consumption of
food, mainly maize and shellfish, and drink, possibly maize
beer or chicha,as well as to musical performancesas part of
activities conducted at Huambacho. Although the analysis
of refuse materials is preliminary,it suggests that the enclosed spaces were designed to accommodate public gatherings of different sizes and composition.
The Huambacho architecturalcanon appears fully developed and is best illustratedby the use of the orthostatic
wall building technique and interior colonnade forms. In
Nepena, orthostatic walls and rectangularpillarswere also
documented by the Proyecto de Rescate Arqueologico
CHINECAS at VN-35 and VN-36 in the Sute Bajo area
(Cotrina et al. 2003 : 9). These architecturalforms were not
17 of 23
17
Figure 13. South profile of the south section of A-5/HA, Huaca-A Complex, showing the superposition
of three occupation floors, the composition of the architecturalfill, and the location of a dated carbon
sample.
18 of 23
north-central coast and suggests that Early Horizon patterns of architecturein Nepena are not without local antecedents.
In Nepena, the construction of Huambacho's distinctive interior colonnaded architectureapparentlyfollowed
the abandonment of the temples of Punkurf and Cerro
Blanco. This is paralleled in Casma where, by the beginning of the 1st millennium B.C., most Initial Period complexes had been abandoned (Pozorski 1987: 23). The Initial Period sites are best characterizedby massive central
mounds, central staircases,aligned circularsunken plazas,
and lateral mounds reminiscent of the U-shaped tradition
of the central coast (see Burger 1987; Williams 1985).
These were superseded by a multitude of enclosure complexes.
Initial Period centers, both on the coast and in the highlands, tended to focus on a single building or monument
which was rituallyentombed and renovated at differentintervalsin time (Burger 1992: 92). In contrast, the Huambacho data indicate an emphasis on multiple enclosed ceremonial spaces. Overall, the presence of multiple sunken
plazas, raised mounds with distinct sub-compounds, and
graded access suggests a fragmentation in the ritual practices of certain Early Horizon groups. Extensive sampling
could identify only three successive building programs at
any one locality, and the Proyecto Huambacho recovered
no evidence, such as offerings, attesting to the ritual entombment of earlier structures.Rather, the remodeling of
architecturalfeatures and the expansion of the ceremonial
complex utilized rubbish as construction fill. Compared to
those in the Initial Period, Early Horizon public building
projects were relativelymodest in size and probably served
only local needs; for example, the two sunken plazas at
Huambacho covered an area of less than 10,000 sq m
while one of the plazas at Pampa de las Llamas-Moxeke
covered almost 200,000 sq m (Moore 1996: 152, based
on Pozorski and Pozorski 1986: 384, fig. 2).
It is clear that the sociocultural landscape of the Initial
Period-Early Horizon cultural transition in Nepena is
more complex than previously envisaged. For instance, it is
apparentthat some communities in the lower Nepena did
not take part in the Chavfn religious network and developed very distinct patterns of ceremonial architecture
(Burger 1993: 67); as such, the north-central coast of Peru is a key area to study culturalvariabilityduring the Early Horizon. While some settlements had prominent
Chavfn ties, such as Pallkain the upper Casma Valley (Tello 1956), it is clearthat coeval neighboring centers, such as
Huambacho, show negligible evidence of Chavfn influence. Neither U-shaped structuresnor circularsunken pits,
the two principal Chavfn architecturaltraits, were docu-
19 of 23
Acknowledgments
This project was supported by grants from the Fonds
Quebecois pour la Recherche sur la Societe et la Culture,
the Sir Richard Stapley Educational Trust, the Gilchrist
EducationalTrust,the Sir Philip Reckitt EducationalTrust,
and the Sainsbury Research Unit for the Arts of Africa,
Oceania, and the Americas. Permission for excavationswas
granted by the Instituto Nacional de Cultura under the
Resolution Directoral Nacional 623-04/INC. I owe many
thanks to Victor Pimentel Spissu and Jeisen Navarro Vega
who co-directed the 2003 and 2004 field seasons respectively. I am also indebted to members of the field crew, especially France-ElianeDumais, AlexandraTaillon-Pellerin,
and Carol Rojas Vega. Fieldwork could not have been
completed without the support and participation of the
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