< CHICAGO Natural History Museum o, Field Museum of Natural History Founded by Marshall Field, 1893 Anthropology, Memoirs Volume II, No. 4 ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXPLORATIONS IN PERU PART IV CANETE VALLEY BY A. L. KROEBER PROFESSOR OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY IN FIELD MUSEUM 22 Plates First Marshall Field Archaeological Expedition to Peru PAUL S. MARTIN CHIEF CURATOR, DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY EDITOR Chicago, U.S.A. 1937 PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY FIELD MUSEUM PRESS CONTENTS PAGE List of Plates 223 Preface 225 I. Area, Sites, and Cultures 227 II. Cerro del Oro: Middle Canete Culture 229 The Hill and Its Structures 229 Late Cemeteries 230 Middle Period Cemeteries and Tombs 232 Middle Canete Pottery 234 Standard Forms 234 Various Forms 237 Figurines 238 Sherds 239 Similarities of the Pottery Style 240 Middle Period Metal Work 240 Middle Period Textiles 240 Cloth 240 Basketry, Slings, Cordage, Spindles 241 Middle Period : Various 243 Late Period at Cerro del Oro 243 III. Cerro Azul : Late Canete Culture 244 Pottery 245 Cloth 247 Metal 247 Various Objects 247 A Cache 249 IV. Summary 253 Appendix I. Middle Canete Tomb Descriptions 255 Appendix II. Middle Canete Tomb Contents 257 Appendix III. Dimensions of Middle Canete Tombs, Walls, and Bricks .... 262 Appendix IV. Late Canete Tombs 264 Appendix V. Measurements of Skulls 266 Appendix VI. Middle Canete Textiles. By L. M. O'Neale 268 221 LIST OF PLATES Fig. 2. By Hurtado. Fig. 1. Conical sieve, NE20-170268.1 Fig. 2. 3. Figurine, A13-169687. Fig. 4. Head of NE5-170252. 5. A-169793. NE5-170250. Fig. 2. NE5- LXIX. Cerro del Oro, Plans. Fig. 1. By Kroeber. LXX. Middle Canete Pottery from Cerro del Oro Double-spout jar, A6a-169666. Fig. figurine, A5a-169792. LXXI. Middle Canete Pottery from Cerro del Oro: Low Bowls, with and without Foot. Fig. 1. NNE10-170281. Fig. 2. F21-169741. Fig. 3. F20-169730. Fig. 4. S3-170289 (the other contents of the tomb appear Late, not Middle, in period). Fig. 5. NE1- 170242. Fig. 6. S6-170298. Fig. 7. A7-169648. Fig. 8. 169465, from Hacienda San Benito, period doubtful. Middle Canete Pottery from Cerro del Oro: Plate-shaped Bowls. Fig. 1 Fig. 2. E-169723. Fig. 3. Al-169618. Fig. 4. F20-169731. Fig Fig. 6. F21-169742. Fig. 7. A6c-169676. Fig. 8. Al-169619. Middle Canete Pottery from Cerro del Oro: Double-spout Jars. Fig. 1. Fig. 2. A8-169654. Fig. 3. A13-169685. Fig. 4. NE1-170243. Middle Canete Pottery from Cerro del Oro: Jars. Fig. 1. F21-169739. 170251. Fig. 3. NE1-170241. Fig. 4. NE18-170256. Middle Canete Pottery from Cerro del Oro: Small Jars and Bowls. Fig. 1. NNE10- 170284. Fig. 2. NNE10-170283. Fig. 3. NE18-170258. Fig. 4. NE4-170248. Fig. 5. A5b-169639. Fig. 6. Al-169613. Fig. 7. Al-169614. Fig. 8. NE1-170244. Fig. 9. F28-169791. Middle Canete Pottery from Cerro del Oro: Various Objects. Fig. 1. 169815, figurine fragment. Fig. 2. A6a-169667, disk with hole, painted. Fig. 3. NE20-170269, one of twenty-five tubes. Fig. 4. A7-169651, "elbow." Fig. 5. A6a-169668, small pitcher. Fig. 6. F-169816, fragment of Pan's pipe. Middle Canete Pottery Fragments, Bell, and Gourds. Fig. 1. Bx-169833. Fig. 169834. Fig. 3. Bx-169835 (upper, left), Bz-169830 (lower, right). Fig. 4. C- Fig. 5. A16-169697, copper bell. Fig. 6. A16-169698, small gourds. Middle Canete Tombs on Cerro del Oro. Fig. 1. Tombs Al-A3a, plan. Fig. 2 A3, section and plan. Fig. 3. Tomb A16, sketch view from front, and plan. Tombs F26-F28 with Late overlay. Middle Canete Jars, Basketry, Miniature Shirt, and Maize. Fig. 1. NE20-170266, tall jar. Fig. 2. NE18-170257, low jar. Figs. 3, 4. Tray and pouch of twilled basketry, A16-169692, A12-169710a. Figs. 5, 6. Fragments of coiled and of twined and wicker basketry (not certain whether of Middle Canete period), Bx-169838, S3-170295. Fig. 7. Miniature shirt, woven, A16-169697a. Fig. 8. Ear of dark red maize, A12-169795. LXXX. Cerro Azul, Views. Fig. 1. West front of Pyramid B (cf. Plan, Plate LXXXI). Fig. 2. Buried cache, containing 169545-59, as uncovered in Quebrada 1. Fig. 3. Pyramids A and B and northwest cerro. Fig. 4. Pyramids A (left), E, and F, and view on bay between northwest and east cerros. Fig. 5. Eastern or main cerro as seen from the west, showing terracing. LXXXI. Sketch of Late Canete (Chincha) Ruins at Cerro Azul. LXXXII. Late Canete Amphoras and Jars from Cerro Azul (Fig. 8) and Cerro del Oro (Figs. 1-7, 9). Figs. 2, 4, 9 are red; the others, blackware. The scale of drawing is the same for all; Fig. 9 has an actual height of 248 mm. Fig. 1. C-169725. Figs. 2, 3, 9. C22-169744- 46-45. Fig. 4. C-169756. Fig. 5. F-169797, overlying Middle period Tomb F28. 1 The Museum catalogue number proper is of six figures, beginning with either 169 or 170. Prefixed to this, for con- venient orientation, is a letter, such as A, B, NNE, indicating the sub-site or cemetery, usually followed by the number of the grave in which the specimen was found. Thus NE20-1702S8 means that the catalogue number of the specimen is 170268 and that it was found in grave 20 of the Cerro del Oro cemetery designated as NE. Cemeteries A, B, C, D, E, F were excavated by Kroeber, NE, NNE, SE, S by Hurtado. 223 LXXII. LXXIII. LXXIV. LXXV. LXXVI. LXXVII. LXXV1II. LXX1X. 2. Bx- 169728. Tomb Fig. 4. 224 LIST OF PLATES Fig. 6. Flat canteen, C-169754, near Tomb 22. Fig. 7. C31-169855. Fig. 8. 169585 from Burial 4, at mouth of Quebradas 8-8a, Cerro Azul. LXXXIII. Late Cafiete Jars and Spindle Whorls and Middle Period Whorl (Fig. 21); from Cerro Azul (Figs. 1-3, 7, 13, 15, 16, 20) and Cerro del Oro (Figs. 4-6, 8-12, 14, 17-19, 21). — Jars all drawn to one scale; Fig. 8 is 140 mm. high. Whorls double scale; Fig. 17, 19 mm., Fig. 21, 42 mm. Figs. 1, 2, 3, 13, 15. 169522-20-21-17-23 from Burial 1, Quebrada 2, Cerro Azul. Fig. 7. 169591, Burial 4. Fig. 16. 169561a. Fig. 20. 169499, Pyramid D, Cerro Azul. Figs. 4, 19. C24-169778-73. Figs. 5, 12. 169764-52, near C-22. Fig. 6. F29-169840. Figs. 8, 9, 10. C31-169858-57-56. Fig. 11. C23- 169767. Fig. 14. C22-169747. Fig. 17. 169772. Fig. 18. 169799, above F28. Fig. 19. C24-169773. Fig. 21 (only Middle period specimen). NEl-170245b. LXXXIV. Late Cafiete Pottery. Fig. 1. 169541, handle and design of large broken jar, Burial 3, west front of Pyramid B, Cerro Azul. Fig. 2. 169807, similar design and modeled head, Hacienda San Benito, gift of Don Luis Nosiglia. Fig. 3. 169485, perforated sherds, strung together, from fill in Pyramid H, Cerro Azul. Fig. 4. C31-169854, Cerro del Oro, same scale as Plate LXXXII, 364 mm. LXXXV. Late Cafiete Cloth, Balance, Carving, and Figurines. Fig. 1. Painted gauze, headband, 169508, from Quebrada 1, Cerro Azul. Fig. 2. Balance, 169544, beam 167 mm. With Fig. 4 and Plate LXXXIV, Fig. 1, in Burial 3, west front Pyramid B, Cerro Azul. Fig. 3. Stone figure, 34 mm. high, 169493, Quebrada 6, Cerro Azul. Fig. 4. Carved wooden tablet, 85 mm. long, 169542, found with Fig. 2 and Plate LXXXIV, Fig. 1. Fig. 5. Pottery figurine, 169726, Site C, Cerro del Oro. LXXXVI. Objects from a Late Cafiete Cache Buried at Cerro Azul. All numbered 169545. Fig. 1. Receptacle made of skunk skull. Fig. 2. Half univalve shell. Fig. 3. Wooden labret. Fig. 4. Comb. Fig. 5. Stone pendant or weight(?). Fig. 6.- Stone carving, two heads. Fig. 7. Carving, human figure with load(?). Fig. 8. Two wound spindles. Fig. 9. Two needles, of silver (above) and wood (below). Fig. 10. Two spine needles, lower with cotton. Fig. 11. Bone awl. Fig. 12. Four painted spindles with colored pottery whorls. Fig. 13. Spindle(?) with loose head. Fig. 14. Cane flute. LXXXVII. Further Objects from the Late Cafiete Cache at Cerro Azul. Figs. 1-4 numbered 169548. Fig. 1. Part of wooden chain or necklace. Fig. 2. Net bag of maguey fiber. Fig. 3. Net cylinder of maguey fiber, with pattern ; Fig. 3a. Mesh detail. Fig. 4. Lunate knife, probably bronze. Fig. 5. Bone awl on cord, 169553q. Fig. 6. Cut wooden peg(?), 169546. LXXXVIII. Middle Cafiete Textiles from Cerro del Oro. Figs. 1, la. Plain weave on cylindrically wound warp, A16-169702. Figs. 2, 2a. Multiple parallel twining, A9-169660. Fig. 3. Finish, one-loop needleknitting. Fig. 4. Tie-dyeing on plain weave, NE18-170262a. LXXXIX. Middle Cafiete Textiles from Cerro del Oro. Fig. 1. Plain weave pouch stuffed with coca, A16-169698g. Figs. 2a, 2b, 2c. Plain weave with interlocking warps and wefts on scaffold wefts, NE18-170322. XC. Middle Cafiete Textiles from Cerro del Oro. Fig. 1. Wool wrapping on fibers, NE18- 170262e. Fig. 2. Sling, A16-169700. Fig. 3. Fragment of garment, half-basket plain weave, A12-169678a, and herringbone twill, A12-169678b. PREFACE This paper is a third report on my expeditions to Peru for Field Museum of Natural History in 1925 and 1926. The first two dealt with the Northern Coast. The present report deals with Canete Valley, some 80 miles or 130 kilometers south of Lima. Canete is an important valley, by no means deficient in imposing ruins, but has been very largely over- looked by archaeologists. My work there was conducted during April and May of 1925; at first in person, at Cerro Azul and Cerro del Oro; and later through a joint expedition of Field Museum and the Uni- versity of San Marcos, Lima, of whose Archaeological Museum Dr. J. C. Tello had charge. This joint expedition was in charge of Sr. Antonio Hurtado, who continued, with my crew of workmen, the excavations which I had begun on the Cerro del Oro. The collections were divided between the two institutions so that the contents of each tomb remained intact. ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXPLORATIONS IN PERU PART IV CANETE VALLEY I. AREA, SITES, AND CULTURES Canete is a large valley as Peruvian coastal valleys go, but contains no town of much consequence. The Canete River has a large catchment basin, whose head meets that of the Rimac, the stream that waters the valley of Lima. The intervening streams all head lower in the mountains and have a very much smaller flow. The intervening valleys therefore contain much less irrigable land than either Lima or Canete. In fact, the Canete is the larg- est Peruvian river, in point of average run-off, south of the Santa. The next adjoining valleys south of Canete, namely, Chincha, Pisco, lea, and Rio Grande (Nazca), are traversed by smaller streams, and, although better known archaeological ly, may have sustained no larger population.1 The Canete River maintains a considerable flow to its mouth at all seasons. With the heavy rains of the beginning of 1925, the one bridge across it was washed away, and a number of weeks elapsed before the current had subsided sufficiently that automobiles could be dragged across a ford by oxen. There are a number of well-known groups of ruins in Canete Valley, such as Canchari, Hungara and Hervay; and, farther upstream, above the coastal valley proper, Lunahuana. While I visited several of these, my work was done at two sites, Cerro Azul or "Blue Hill," and Cerro del Oro or "Gold Hill." The former is an imposing cluster of pyramidal ruins set immediately back of the modern port of CeiTO Azul, the harbor of the valley. These ruins are fitted into a pocket of desert hills and are not visible from the harbor nor from the cultivated lands to the south and inland. They have been much dug over superficially, but apparently the yield of treasure was small, since there is no large-scale destruction of monuments. So far as my observations go, there is only one culture represented at Cerro Azul, this belonging to the Late period, more or less synchronous with the Inca dominion, though no doubt partly antedating it. This Late Canete culture is very similar to the Late Chincha culture described by Uhle, Strong,- and myself.2 The Cerro del Oro is a nearly free-standing hill about four kilometers inland from Cerro Azul. It is connected at the northeast by a low saddle with hills beyond; but on all other sides it is surrounded by ditches and cultivated lands. A fraction of a kilometer to the southeast of the hill stands the town of San Luis, or old Canete, which may represent the 1 The exact figures are compiled in No. 2 of this volume, p. 76, 1930. The annual run-off in millions of cubic meters is: Santa, 5,100 (catchment basin, 11,500 km.2); Canete, 2,200 (5,200 km.2); Pativilca, 1,600; Huaura, 900 (3,400 km.2); Pisco, 900 (4,300 km.2); Rimac, 900 (2,500 km.2); Chancay, 600 (2,200 km.2); Mala, 500 (1,800 km.2); Chincha, 400 (2,200 km.8); Ica, 300 (1,500 km.2). The areas irrigated, of course, depend as much on the conformation of the land as on the volume of the stream, and thus correlate imperfectly. In hectares irrigated, Ica, with the smallest stream of those considered, heads the list: 20,000. Then follow Rimac, 18,000 hectares; Canete, 14,000; Chincha, 14,000; Pativilca, 12,000; Pisco, Huaura, and Chancay, 10,000 each; Santa, 5,000; Mala, 4,000. In general, the northerly valleys have the larger streams, the southerly ones more land that is easily brought under water. Roughly, coastal population size may be estimated as proportionate to irrigable area, especially in prehistoric times. By this gauge, Lima, Canete, and Chincha would have been the most populous valleys between Chicama and Ica. 2 Univ. Calif. Publ. Amer. Arch. Ethn., vol. 21, Nos. 1, 2, pp. 1-94, 1924. 227 228 caSJete valley site of an ancient settlement whose inhabitants used the hill for their cemeteries. The hill itself contains no remains of non-funerary structures of any note; nor are there pyramids or other buildings of consequence in the immediate vicinity. Two cultures are represented in the many thousands of burials that have been made on the Cerro del Oro. One is the Late Canete or Late Chincha culture just mentioned as occurring at Cerro Azul. The other is an earlier culture which I have provisionally called Middle Canete. It is the earlier of the two by its stylistic affiliations. Also, I succeeded in finding a stratification in which Middle Canete burials were overlain by Late Canete grave material. As a stratification this was not a very impressive example, but, as I have previ- ously pointed out, thoroughly good stratifications are either unusually rare in Peru or very difficult to discover. The Middle Canete culture is characterized by skulls deformed fronto-occipitally; struc- tures of small cubical hand-made adobes; a scarcity of metal; and by pottery and textiles which show some Nazca influence, but no direct Tiahuanaco influence. The Nazca elements in the pottery are all of Late Nazca type. They are what Gayton and I have called the Nazca Y phase of that1 culture, but without the Tiahuanaco element which in the Valley of Nazca itself is found in association with Nazca Y remains. On the other hand, there are occasional traits of Middle Canete pottery, both in design and shape, which suggest or anticipate later Peruvian styles of the coast; Late lea especially. The place of the culture in the Peruvian time scale is, therefore, not one which I should wish to fix with much positiveness — it looks both post-Early and pre-Late. This is the general era of Tiahuanaco elements on the coast; but the absence of these at Canete, at any rate in the materials so far known, prevents a precise, positive chronological tie-up with other Middle period cultures of the central and southern coast. It may be that search farther upstream, as at Lunahuana, will reveal the intrusion of highland influences in Canete, as in nearly all other coastal valleys. Even if so, however, it is rather remarkable that the culture which I encountered on the Cerro del Oro should be so free from evidence of highland influences. Evidently this influence established itself in quite different degrees of strength in different coastal valleys. I ought to add that the Middle Canete culture is not merely a mixture of terminal Early elements and anticipations of Late ones, but contains a series of distinctive stylistic traits peculiar to itself. • Univ. Calif. Publ. Amer. Arch. Ethn., vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 1-46, 1927; see especially pp. 26-33, Plates 12-17. II. CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CANETE CULTURE THE HILL AND ITS STRUCTURES Apparently the Middle Canete people covered nearly every part of the surface of the Cerro del Oro with their cemeteries. These consist of series of terraces rising up the slope of the hill, the terraces being held back by walls of adobes. Frequently there are several walls on nearly the same level. Occasionally, transverse walls were added and building carried a few meters higher, resulting in low, flat-topped pyramidal structures about the size of a small house or large room. At a subsequent time the people of the Late Cafiete-Chincha culture used part of the hill for their cemeteries. They concentrated especially on the southeastern slope, the one that overlooks the town of San Luis. Here they constructed a large walled cemetery, and buried not only within it but over considerable stretches on both sides and below. These Late cemeteries have been almost completely sacked. The ground has been thoroughly torn up and is still pitted with what look like shell-holes. This work would not have been performed except in the hunt for silver and gold, and would not have been as thorough as it was unless the yield had been encouraging. It may be assumed, therefore, that the hill derives its name from the exploitation of these Late cemeteries. Over other parts of the cerro, where Late graves are few, there has been less plundering, and whole series of intact Middle Canete tombs are not difficult to find. Because of the lack of precious metal the treasure hunters have not been tempted. That this is the outline of the story of the use of the hill is indicated by two facts. First, practically all tombs or other structures on the hill, whether Middle or Late, are built of the small cubical hand-made adobes. Such adobes are definitely associated elsewhere, as in Lima Valley, with the Middle period of Peruvian prehistory, and are not known to have been used in Late structures anywhere on the coast from Lima to Nazca. It looks, therefore, as if the Late Canete people had mainly destroyed Middle period tombs and built their own out of the materials of their predecessors. In this way the fact is also accounted for that the debris in and about the churned-up soil of the walled Late cemetery contains a minor per- centage of characteristic Middle type sherds. By contrast, the surface debris on other sides of the hill, such as the northeastern, which is overwhelmingly of Middle period type, contains a minor scattering mixture of Late fragments, due no doubt to the intrusion here and there of Late period graves. I do not know of an available map of the Cerro del Oro. Neither Hurtado nor I was equipped for mapping even of an approximate kind. We independently sketched the outline of the hill from having walked over its parts many times. The two maps as brought together in Plate LXIX, Figs. 1 and 2, show no great degree of correspondence, I must admit. How- ever, my sketch is avowedly only diagrammatic. Most of my excavations were made on the higher, gentle slopes, and I disregarded the numerous quebradas or gullies at the foot, noting only a few which were of significance with reference to my excavations. Hurtado, on the other hand, noted the indentations in the perimeter of the hill, and perhaps exag- gerated them. Allowing for this difference, our two maps probably vary mostly in that the relation of length and breadth of the hill is inverse. As regards this ratio of the length and breadth diameters, I feel that my sketch is probably more nearly accurate than his, just as his is superior in giving the actual course of the outline. 229 230 caSete valley In any event, part way up the hill the slope in general becomes gentler, and a consider- able area on top is almost level. In the center of this level area stands a small ruin (R) with considerable of its walls still intact. This is the only conspicuous building on the hill, and is rather small at that. More or less to its west, near the head of the gully which has eaten from the north or northwest up into the level top of the hill, is another ruin, which is a pyramidal rather than a walled structure. This has been trenched through. Down the same gully a little distance are retaining walls (B), more or less crumbled. These seem to constitute the front of small pyramids or terraces facing the gully. On the opposite southern or southeastern side of the hill, two gullies which enter its outline contain Chinese cemeteries. The more easterly, near the Hacienda Casa Blanca, is that of the "esclavos" or indentured coolies brought to Peru in the earlier part of the nineteenth century. The other, more westerly and toward San Luis, is that of the more modern Chinese. At the edge of the latter stands a crag against which a flat-topped pyra- mid or terrace has been built (D). LATE CEMETERIES Other ruins or traces of ruins occur on various parts of the hill, but none of them are of much moment except for a large walled cemetery (WC). This walled cemetery was evidently constructed and certainly used by the people of the Late or Chincha culture. It is on the southwestern half of the hill, on the side directly overlooking San Luis. The quad- rangular enclosure I estimated at about 400 x 250 feet, or say 125 x 75 meters, the long axis corresponding with the long axis of the hill. On the two northerly sides the enclosing wall is double, with a sort of street between. This sort of street is found in Late constructions at places as far separated as Pachacamac, Armatambo in Lima Valley, and Chanchan in the north. The southeastern and southwestern walls are single. In spite of some evidence of crumbling at the top of the enclosing walls of this cemetery, 45 courses of adobes can still be counted, in places, from the present top to the beginning of the talus at the foot of the wall. This exposed wall-face I estimated at about 5 meters high at the maximum point. This figure corresponds well with the size of the adobes, which I calculated to average about 9 cm. in thickness. With 2 cm. additional allowed for mud mortar in each course, the 45 courses would aggregate close to 5 meters. If to these 5 meters are added allowances for the foot of the wall now covered by talus, and for loss through crumbling at the top, the original height of the enclosing free-standing wall may be estimated at around 7 meters. In the north corner of this quadrangle are some large rocks which apparently interfered with burials. All the remainder of the quadrangle must have been densely filled with burials, enough of which contained precious metals to make the thorough sacking of the cemetery profitable. The largest excavation pits are about 5 meters deep and 10 meters or more in diameter, and there are more which measure 3 meters in depth and 5-7 meters across. Among the churned soil and adobes from the tombs is a mass of cultural ddbris: abundance of white cloth from body wrappings, and sherds, mostly of a rough red ware; but, as will be shown, plain red or plain black ware is characteristic of the Canete form of Late Chincha culture. Coarse white cotton cloth wrappings are characteristic of Late burials all along the Peruvian coast. The skulls that lie about this plundered cemetery are nearly all natural in shape; that is, undeformed, except perhaps for minor unintentional flattening of the occiput. This trait again is characteristic of the Late period on the coast. CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CANETE CULTURE 231 Some of these skulls show another trait which is widespread in the Late period: green stains around the jaws or occasionally about the ears. This green stain is the result of copper or sometimes silver ornaments attached to the head. Most frequently a thin disk or small sheet of the metal appears to have been put into the mouth of the corpse, the stain, therefore, being strongest on the inner side of the jaws and palate. Along the entire coast, so far as I know it, these green stains on skulls are a convenient and almost invulnerable criterion of lateness. They are especially convenient because treasure hunters and even pot hunters invariably throw out bones, unpainted pottery, and unpatterned cloth. Undecorated cloth and pottery fragments are often difficult to identify with positiveness as to period; but skulls last longer on the surface than other bones, and the stains frequently suffice to tell the tale of cultural age. This walled cemetery also contains some sherds characteristic of the Middle Canete culture. These, however, constitute only a minute fraction of the total. They suggest that this part of the hill contained a certain number of Middle period burials, which were broken up when the Late people founded their more ambitious graveyard. The walled cemetery is only part of an area of Late or Chincha burials. These extend both downhill from the enclosure and to its left as one stands looking down on the town of San Luis; in other words, in a general easterly direction from the enclosure more or less to the foot of the hill. This entire area I have called site C. More or less on a level with the walled enclosure in the unenclosed part of the C area are about five terraces. The retaining wall of the highest of these terraces rises flush with the almost level natural top of the hill. Above this there appear to be no burials; they begin at its foot and continue through the lower terraces. Here also there are enormous excavation pits, and the same type of surface debris shows, although the sacking appears to have been less complete than within the enclosure, with the result that an undisturbed burial can still be found here and there. Site D is really nothing more than the eastern end of the area which I have designated as C, namely, the portion of it which lies close to the truncated pyramidal ruin by the modern Chinese cemetery. Here I succeeded in finding one or two Middle period graves. Apparently the disturbances by Late grave diggers and subsequent Caucasian treasure hunters were less on this periphery than over most of the C area. The area of Late graves continues westward from the walled cemetery, or to the right as one looks down from the hill, toward or even beyond the end of the long axis of the cerro. This area I have called site F. Here there are mainly low walls, now buried, which formed terraces of small elevation. In this F area, Late burials are most in evidence, but Middle burials also occur. It was in this site that the one stratification occurred which I was able to discover. Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 4, sketches this stratification. The Middle period graves were rather shallow; the Late interments seem not to have been vertically above them but somewhat uphill, even more shallow, and without walling of the tombs. Evidently with the slow denudation of the surface of the hill some of the Late interments gradually slid some- what downhill, until the one I discovered lay directly over Middle period tomb F-28 (Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 4). The overlying Late material was neither intact nor plundered; it had quite evidently slipped or worked down the slope a certain distance without disturbance by human agencies. I admit that this is the sort of stratification about which one is more inclined to feel apologetic than proud. However, I can only repeat that clean-cut stratifications either are very rare in Peru or we have not yet learned how to look for them. Obviously a strati- fication of graves is likely to be less convincing than a stratification due to the accumulation 232 caSete valley of rubbish. There is plenty of the latter in Peru; every workman recognizes basura (refuse). But, in almost all instances, the rubbish appears to have been carried and dumped as fill where it is found. Moving and piling up quantities of earth in the form either of solid masses of adobe bricks, or of adobe waHs containing loose fill, appears to have been one of the prevailing occupations of the ancient Peruvians; at any rate, those of the coast. This habit makes the task of the modern archaeologist no lighter, and is one of the causes of our having laboriously to reconstruct the sequence of cultural events by inference, instead of being able to point with satisfaction to a neat, clean, ready-made stratification. MIDDLE PERIOD CEMETERIES AND TOMBS On the whole, the parts of the hill which prove most productive of Middle period remains are those on its northeastern half; that is to say, the rather gradual slope from the central level area toward the end of the cerro which is more or less connected with the hills to the east and north. This general Middle period area I have called A, and it includes Hurtado's NE and NNE sites. Here there extends a long series of walls more or less parallel to one another, and horizontal, that is, transverse, to the slope of the hill. Some of these walls project slightly above the surface, others are entirely covered, and some buried several meters deep. How far the walls were below the surface when they were constructed, or how far they have been subsequently covered by decay of the surface, I found it hard to decide. Mainly it would seem that they were originally sunk into the ground; but they are probably more covered now than when they were built. In a broad sense, these series of walls may be construed as retaining walls for terraces in which burials were made. However, this description can be accepted only with reservations. The general effect of the surface in this A area is that of a series of low and much denuded terraces, but the parallel walls are sometimes only a meter or two apart, and occasionally two or more walls are in actual contact. Here and there cross-walls appear, and the walls as a whole do not form a regular or connected system. They vary from 2 or 3 to more than 10 meters in length, with gaps between their ends as irregular as the spaces between parallel walls. Here and there the cross-walls are better developed, and the result is a small truncated pyramid or cubical walled space, mostly or wholly underground. In general, the purpose of the walls seems to have been to serve as a basis for the con- struction of tombs. Most frequently, these tombs are built against the wall, at its foot. Sometimes they form a niche or recess in the wall, or occasionally are entirely within it. The Middle period tombs are built of the usual adobes. Their floor size varies from about 30 x 30 cm. to 100 x 150 cm. or even larger. The interior height is normally not far from 60 cm. ; in other words, sufficient to accommodate a seated, crouching body, with the head pushed between the knees. Children's tombs may be lower; they are often smaller. The occasional large tombs are from 80 to 110 cm. high, with one found rising to 140 cm. The ordinary tomb is not far from cubical. The depth of the grave, as measured from the surface of the ground to its roof, ranges from a fraction of a meter to nearly 3 meters; but most frequently it is in the vicinity of a meter or a little more. (In the tables, depth is the distance from the tomb floor to the surface.) The tombs are, therefore, neither very deep nor difficult to reach. Their approximate location is often indicated, after a little experience, by the surface contours, which indicate the tops of walls. Hurtado was more meticulous than I in consistently designating tomb measurements, and I therefore list his figures in condensed form in Appendix III. CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CASETE CULTURE 233 That so many of the tombs remain undisturbed is evidently due to the fact that trial soon showed that they contained no metal, in fact, usually not even showy pottery vessels. The roofing of the tombs is peculiar. Not uncommonly the roof consists of the same small cubical adobes of which the walls are built. These roof bricks are simply joined with mud mortar, like a pavement, except that they hang free, with soil above them. In some cases the roof has been crushed in, in others it remains intact. This means, of course, that the mortar acted as a kind of cement, binding all the adobes of the roof into a monolith. This must have been allowed to dry out firmly before the tomb was recovered with soil. Obviously this construction would not be strong enough to support its own weight, let alone that of superimposed fill, over any large span. It was generally used without further reinforcement only where the smaller diameter of the tomb could be kept down to 60 or 70 cm. For instance, tomb A-16 of my own excavating had an interior floor area of 110 x 80 cm. (Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 3). The walls were built up 80 cm. high, all of adobes except for the front wall, which was adobes mixed with stones. Across the breadth was laid a beam some- what in front of the middle of the length of the chamber. From this beam forward, the roof was of stone slabs. From the roof to the surface of the ground was 110 cm. On the tomb's small floor area of less than a square meter were set six bodies, as shown in the illustration. None of these had the head bent down between the knees. This appears to be the reason for the above-average height of this tomb interior. Another roofing method occasionally used was to arch the outer wall over the tomb until it met the heavier retaining wall against which the tomb was built. The roof, therefore, forms a half vault. Hurtado and I each encountered a case of this kind (Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 2). There is no question of an approach to a true arch : the roof span is not supported by the shape or placing of the blocks so much as by the mortar tying it into a unit. At that, this type of roof, curve-sloping instead of level, and leaned against a higher and larger wall, would presumably resist pressure from above better than the more frequent flat roof. Three of the largest tombs discovered by Hurtado are described by him as having gabled roofs. These are NE-12, NE-18, and NE-20. In this case the width ranged from 75 to 100 cm., and the roof was formed of adobe slabs approximately half a meter long and from one-fourth to one-third meter wide (exact figures in Appendix III). Hurtado's notes do not mention a wooden ridge-pole, so I assume that the two rows of adobe slabs were leaned up against each other like pairs of cards in a card-house. The size of the Middle period tomb seems to have had little relation to the number of bodies it contained. Hurtado's three large gabled tombs each contained only one body, except that his NE-18 also held body 19, that of a child, in a niche. He also described his bodies NE-2 and 3 as found in one recess; otherwise, in 38 cases, he discovered one mummy to one tomb. My seven small tombs at site F also contained only one body each. However, 21 tombs opened by me in area A (which includes Hurtado's NE and NNE) contained 37 bodies or parts of bodies. The distribution of these is shown in Appendix II. As for massive retaining walls, as distinct from tomb walls, Hurtado's measurements of several groups of these are also given in Appendix III. His figures correspond with my observations and more scattered measurements. The most significant feature is undoubtedly the randomness of height, thickness, and disposition of walls. A higher wall may be thicker, but it also may be thinner. Parallel walls, evidently belonging to the same system, may be in contact or more than 3 meters apart; their length may be equal or different. These retaining or terracing or boundary walls within the cemetery are generally 4 or 5 bricks of adobe in thickness; but this number also varies. The ordinary tomb wall consists mostly of a single thickness of brick. 234 caSete valley The cubical adobes of the Cerro del Oro I estimated to average 12 x 9 x 9 cm. This is about halfway between the sizes which Hurtado reported as most frequent, i.e., 14x14x10 and 10x10x7.5. Some other of his figures are given in Appendix III. It will be seen that mostly he gives two dimensions the same, and the third smaller; whereas my generalized observation made the third dimension larger than the two equal ones. This difference shows the desirability of recording actual measurements on a sufficiently large series of samples, rather than near-estimates or impressions. However, the bricks are more irregular than measurements would indicate, their surfaces being uneven. The adobes are not only made by hand but roughly made. In spite of their consistent approximation to a near-cubical form, they are really not very far removed from Uhle's "fist-lump" adobes as he encountered them at Chincha and Pisco. They do not regularly taper, as do many of the sub-conical adobes in Nazca (Tello's odontiform). But if one end of the Canete brick is smaller by reason of slovenly manufacture — and this frequently happens — the small end is laid inside the wall. The bricks are smaller than the Proto-Lima (better, Middle Lima) bricks at Aramburu. I noted specifically that they are square as seen from the end, in contrast with those at Aramburu. This observation corresponds with my memorandum of average proportions of around 12x9x9 cm. for the Canete adobes. In any event, however rough their form, the texture of the adobes is excellent. They are hard and difficult to break. This rather fits in with the suggestion already advanced that the Late or Chincha population to considerable extent re-used adobes made in Middle Canete times. The laying of the adobes is good enough, considering the irregularity of size and form. Obviously they had to be embedded in considerable quantities of mortar to take up the unevenness; equally obviously, the thickness of the mortar between bricks is also variable. This mortar, as usual in coastal Peru, is nothing but mud of the same clayey soil of which the adobes have been made by previous drying in the sun. MIDDLE CAfiETE POTTERY STANDARD FORMS It seems best first to describe the several types of Middle Canete pottery, and then to discuss their relations to other Peruvian cultures. Conical Sieves. — Plate LXX, Fig. 1, is an example of this type, which, so far as I know, is new to Peruvian archaeology. The specimen shown is 22 cm. high and 13.5 cm. in diam- eter. The upper edge is turned in an inward lip. The outer rim is painted black, or rather dark reddish brown. The walls are thin. The perforations, which were evidently made with a spine, needle, or straw, have been carefully smoothed of pushed-through clay on the inside. The pricking instrument appears not to have followed any very regular course. The unbaked vessel was evidently set with its pointed end up: the prod of the punch was then directed downward. The perforating evidently began at the top, a couple of centimeters from the point; the rows of holes mostly follow vertical lines, though these are by no means straight. When the perforations had been carried over most of the surface which was to remain unpainted red, three horizontal rows of holes were punched. While these sieves are not exactly abundant, they occur with fair frequency. Besides the one figured, which was excavated by Hurtado, I found two in graves, 169662 in A-10 and 169673 in A-6. Many fragments were also found on the surface and in debris. All these indicate identical shape and banding, except that one fragment, included in 169819, has four narrow stripes of black instead of a single band. Apart from the thickened angle at the rim, the ware varies from about 2 to 4.5 mm. in thickness. The holes are from 2 to 8 mm. apart between centers. Where the holes are small they are usually also close, and sometimes CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CANETE CULTURE 235 arranged in regular rows horizontally and vertically. Larger holes are spaced more widely apart. Some of the fragments are thoroughly smoothed inside as well as out; these are usually pieces with many and fine holes. Others are not smoothed on the interior, each perforation remaining surrounded with the little rim of clay that has been pushed through. Such roughness as has been allowed to remain is always on the inside. Also, the punching strokes seem invariably to have been slanted downward from the outside, as the vessel sat on its rim. It is clear that these cones would hardly have served adequately to sift anything solid, but that they were used for straining water or chicha. Sprinkling is also a possibility, but hardly probable: on trial, the cone fails to scatter water. At any rate, a ritual use is suggested. This agrees with the limited geographical distribution of the form. A chiefly utilitarian vessel would hardly have remained confined to a single valley.1 Low Bowls with Foot. — I secured four low, footed bowls: in F-20, F-21, F-28, F-30; and Hurtado found one each in NNE-10 and S-6. There are also many fragments of feet. The variation in shape and painted design is shown in Plate LXXI, Figs. 1-4, 6. Three of these are painted with red and black on the whitish outer surface; one has merely a black rim, like the conical sieve; and the fifth is uncolored, except for a red slip somewhat darker than the pale red of the body of the vessel. The outer wall ranges from vertical to well incurved. Fig. 6 is somewhat aberrant, in that the side wall is virtually reduced to an incurved lip, but the bottom rises more than in the others. The size ranges from 15 to 25 cm. in diameter; the height from 4 to 8 cm. The foot varies less than the bowl. It runs pretty uniformly from 7 to 8 cm. in diameter, more rarely up to 9. Its height is from 0.5 to 1 cm. When these bowls are painted, it is with rather small designs; mostly not especially reminiscent of any one Peruvian pottery style. However, the shapes definitely recall the style of Middle and Late lea, especially the latter, in general flatness, sharpness of angle, and vertical or incurved rim. Low Bowls without Foot. — These are about as numerous as the footed specimens, but usually smaller; ranging from about 10 to 20 cm. across. The walls may be vertical or rounded inward: Plate LXXI, Figs. 5, 7. A design is applied or omitted about as often as in the footed bowls. The plain samples are likely to have the inner side washed with dark red or purplish brown. Rim fragments can usually not be distinguished as coming from bowls with or without foot. Plates or Cumbrous Bowls. — This is a typical Middle Canete form, ranging from a shallow flaring bowl which is almost a plate to more massive and deeper ones, which, how- ever, also flare into a gradual curve. The former have a diameter four or five times that of the depth; the latter, three times; but the two extremes intergrade. The ground color is red, the design generally black; sometimes also white. The black may be replaced by a purplish metallic maroon. Occasionally the inside of a plate is simply washed over with this purple (Plate LXXII). In graves these plates are sometimes set on the floor of the tomb, but frequently one of them has been laid inverted over the mummy's head, like a hat. In general type of shape and design these low bowls or plates obviously are related to the type which Kelly has described as "cumbrous bowls."2 They are, it is true, less heavy than most Peruvian cumbrous bowls, and in their extreme form they are shallower. Their 1 1 found a small fragment of one of these sieves (169883) in Mala, the second valley north of Canete, in one of several great heaps of debris near the buildings of Hacienda Salitre. This is the most northerly specimen known to me which can be connected: with the Middle Canete culture. 2 Univ. Calif. Publ. Amer. Arch. Ethn., vol. 24, No. 6, pp. 325-341, 1930. Cf. Figs. 67-70 for Canete. 236 caRete valley designs are also related to those of typical cumbrous bowls, especially in the use of segments or arcs and stepped triangle figures along the rim. The Middle Cafiete bowls, however, go farther in this design, in that the main area between two opposite segment or arc figures is filled with stripes parallel to the segments; thus, Plate LXXII, Figs. 3, 5, 7. This tendency toward parallel striping is perhaps their most characteristic design feature. A few of the bowls thicken toward the top, and then bevel off toward the edge. Such are Figs. 1 and 2. It will be seen that in these cases the design is confined to the annular rim bevel. Fig. 4 shows a related pattern, but without thickening or bevel. Fig. 6 also restricts the design to the rim; in this case there is no relationship to the beveled pieces. Kelly's finding is to the effect that Peruvian vessels of this type, whenever their period is known or can be inferred from definite stylistic resemblances, are of Tiahuanacoid or later time, but in no case yet discovered earlier. The Cafiete plate-bowls are sufficiently similar to the cumbrous ones from elsewhere to make it seem highly probable that the Middle Cafiete culture to which they belong cannot well be much earlier than Tiahuanaco. On the other hand, Kelly has also shown that the general type persisted in some areas, such as lea and Nazca, with relatively little change from Tiahuanaco to Incaic times. Consequently, the Cafiete bowls do not necessarily limit the culture to Tiahuanaco (medieval Peruvian) time. Small-mouthed Jars. — These were found occasionally, and in two sizes. The larger ones are from 30 to 35 cm. in height, nearly as much in diameter, and with a mouth generally under 10 cm. across. The mouth rises from 3 to 5 cm. and is usually vertical walled, although one specimen shows a slight flare. The greatest diameter of the body is usually somewhere above its middle. The flat base varies from a third to half of the greatest diameter. All these larger jars are of the usual red ware with a design covering more or less the upper half. Figs. 3 and 4 of Plate LXXIV seem typical (the face of the latter has the nose molded, the other features merely painted). Plate LXXIX, Fig. 1, is like this last, except that the whole upper part of the vessel is slipped in maroon purple and on this are painted four double spirals, two in chalky white, two in yellowish or greenish white, similar to the one spiral in Plate LXXIV, Fig. 4, but smaller. Small jars are represented by Plate LXXIV, Figs. 1, 2. These are about half as high as the large jars and of generally similar proportions, except that the vertical neck is relatively higher. Of the two pieces illustrated, the first is slipped, except around the base, with dark purple. Six crude eight-pointed flowers or stars are painted in white on as many bosses. Seen from the top, the vessel is more hexagonal than the drawing would indicate. The other jar of this pair has its upper half slipped with white. On this the design is painted in deep purple bordered with black — on the front only. The rear half is white. The neck is slipped purple, but with a pigment applied more densely, so that the effect tends toward black, whereas the purple in the pattern is more reddish, as the draftsman has shown it. The design looks like a fragment or derivative from the interlocking fish pattern of later Early Nazca. The paneling of the pattern is a trait that in general is characteristic of Peruvian styles which have come under Tiahuanaco influence. Miniature Jars. — Plates LXXV and LXXVI show four jars of as many shapes, which have little in common, other than the fact that they range only from 8 to 12 cm. in height. Plate LXXVI, Fig. 5, is crudely overpainted in white and is the only Middle Cafiete jar with a handle. Plate LXXV, Fig. 3, is evidently a miniature model of the large jars. The paste is yellowish rather than the usual red. The design is black and white. Figures 1 and 2 of Plate LXXV are from one grave, Hurtado's NNE-10. Both are rather crudely made and CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CANETE CULTURE 237 painted. Figure 1 has a bird's head projecting from the shoulder, with black and white wings and legs sketchily painted in. Specimen 169669, from tomb A6a, not illustrated, is similar to Plate LXXV, Fig. 3, but only a little more than half as large. Bridge-and-spout Jars. — Something over half a dozen jars with two spouts, or with a single spout connected to a figure by a bridge handle, were found by Hurtado and myself. Five of these that came to Chicago are shown in Plates LXX and LXXIII. Two are spherical or cylindrical, without modeling: Plate LXX, Fig. 2, and Plate LXXIII, Fig. 1. Both are painted with a geometric design in red, white, and black; or, to be more exact, Plate LXX, Fig. 2, has two shades of red, one more purplish. Plate LXXIII, Fig. 4, has a woman's head and arms modeled on the upper edge of the cylindrical body. She carries on her head a child. From this a bridge handle extends to the spout, which is on the opposite side of the vessel. Evidently the body of the vessel was to be construed as the woman's body, or as the cloak covering it, because her arms emerge out of this, and at the bottom her feet are crudely indicated by painted modeling. The woman's face and arms are painted or tattooed, and the eye is the longitudinal one of late Early Nazca. The whole stylistic concept of the vessel is that of debased Nazca. The two other vessels of this group are wholly modeled. In Plate LXXIII, Fig. 2, the bird has holes for two spouts, one on each shoulder. The paste is crude and crumbly and about half of the slip has been lost. The painting appears to have been in three colors — red, black, and white. The remnants of red are dark and somewhat purplish; the black is really medium gray. Plate LXXIII, Fig. 3, shows three fruits, but the stem above their junction has been lost. The two fruits farthest from the stem contain orifices which undoubtedly terminated in spouts. The third fruit, directly under the stem, has no such orifice on top; its connection with the two other fruits is through the bodies and is invisible. This vessel appears to have been washed with red. The only black and white is in small areas below where the stems of the spouts have been broken off. The bird vessel is typical of Nazca Y style where this comes associated with Epigonal. The triple-fruit jar is also characteristic of late Nazca, though less definitely so. It will be noted that on all the vessels of this class the spouts spread or flare at a considerable angle. In the pure Nazca style, in both its A and B phases, the spouts are cylindrical rather than tapering and parallel rather than spreading. The spread and taper become typical of the last Nazca period, when base Tiahuanaco influence is visible in vessels found in the same graves, or even on the same vessel that is still partly Nazcoid. Where the spouts continued into the post-Tiahuanaco cultures, as in late Chimu, they are also regularly tapering and spreading. These spouted vessels are strong evidence that the Middle Canete culture cannot be placed earlier than the terminal Nazca period, when this was becoming infiltrated with Tiahuanaco-Epigonal elements — that is, with highland influence. On the other hand, there is not a single intact vessel from a Canete tomb which is done in strict or complete Tiahuanaco manner. It looks as if such highland strain as there may be in Middle Canete pottery had reached Canete Valley not so much by direct import from the mountains behind the valley as by coming up the coast in the form of Nazca Y-Epigonal hybrid influences. VARIOUS FORMS Flat Jars. — These are represented by a couple of vessels about 12 cm. in diameter, 10 cm. high, and about 8 cm. across the low flaring mouth. Plate LXXV, Fig. 7, shows the one with the most interesting design: viz., conventionalized fishes crudely executed. Plate LXXIX, 238 caRete valley Fig. 2, also has a white shoulder. On this are painted nine inverted V's in black, each en- closing a smaller inverted V. The spacing, angles, and thickness of strokes are very irregular. As a matter of fact, there are nine full V's and a tenth has been squeezed into the insufficient remaining space, the smaller V which it should contain being left out. This piece is from the same grave, NE-18, as the miniature jar of Plate LXXV, Fig. 3. The two are alike in that the paste is yellowish buff instead of red. The white and black pigment on both is also of substantial quality, however crude the handling of the brush. Miscellaneous. — A red, black, and white bowl with a flat bottom and flaring but concave sides is shown in Plate LXXV, Fig. 4. The design is painted on in the usual haphazard Middle Canete manner, but is more pleasing than usual. The entire inside of the bowl, which measures 15 cm. in diameter, is painted with a metallic black or dark gray, through which the red paste shines with a purplish effect. Holed Pottery Disks. — An unexplained type is flat disks or plates with a hole about 5 cm. in diameter in the center. Two of these remain in the collections in Chicago: Nos. 169667 (Plate LXXVI, Fig. 2) from tomb A-6a, and 170260a from tomb NE-18. They are respectively 15 and 16 cm. in diameter and almost flat, the depth of curvature being scarcely 1.5 cm. The ware is rather coarse and thick — from 5 to 8 mm. — and reddish. The first piece has a white slip on the concave side, with the very crude red and black design; the other is simply slipped in white throughout. Both pieces look as though they had been modeled with the hole in place; this is almost certain for the one figured. Their use and purpose is entirely conjectural. Allied to these are large sherds with one or more holes bored through them. No. 170253 from tomb NE-5 is an irregular fragment of thick gray ware, about 12 x 10 cm. Near the middle is a perforation, and half of another remains at one edge. Tomb NE-20 yielded No. 170270. This is reddish ware from a large jar. The piece has been chopped out with seven or eight blows of an edged implement, and is irregularly polygonal, the largest diameters being about 12 and 14 cm. The central hole, 1.5 cm. in diameter, has been ground or bored out from both sides. Tubes. — In tomb NE-20 there were 25 reddish pottery tubes, closed at one end, un- painted and unfinished on the surface, one of which is shown in Plate LXXVI, Fig. 3. One- half of these objects is now in Lima, the other half in Field Museum. They average about 20 cm. in length and a scant 3 cm. in maximum diameter. The uniformity, however, is rather rough, the longest and shortest pieces differing by fully 2 cm. The upper part of each contains a tubular hole between 1 and 1.5 cm. in diameter. This hole extends the full length of the tube, to where it is closed off at the bottom; but on the outside the objects constrict perceptibly about halfway down. The purpose of these tubes is unknown. They could have held liquids, meal, powder, or feathers, or they may have served as sockets for sticks or handles. Pan's Pipe. — Plate LXXVI, Fig. 6, shows a fragmentary Pan's pipe of pottery, found on site F among Middle Canete remains, but not in a tomb. The piece has been lost, and I dare not describe color and texture from memory, although I assume it was red and without painted design. The type is an Early Nazca one. FIGURINES A few pottery figurines and heads were found. They agree in having the narrow almond eye of Nazca B and Y molded heads. The best preserved, 169687, from A-13, is shown in Plate LXX, Fig. 3. The part of the figurine which remains is 11 cm. long. It is flat, only 2.5 cm. in greatest thickness. The head is curved backward in a way not shown in the CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CASETE CULTURE 239 drawing. The head is also flat, except for the nose, the eyes being wholly painted on. The pattern appears to represent the design of a garment. The painting is in red, dark reddish brown, and white over a red paste. Tomb A-5a contained a similar but larger figurine head, 169792, Plate LXX, Fig. 4. This is 5 cm. in breadth. Again there is no modeling, except the prominent nose and a shal- low slit for the mouth. In contrast with the last piece, the eyes definitely slant. The face is yellow, the hair and pupils rusty black, the whites of the eyes white. A yellow face is typical of Nazca B and Y female heads (the preceding figurine, however, has the face red). The present head is also flat and curved backward. The fact that it has a finished upper edge rather precludes its having been a handle on a large jar, which otherwise it suggests. This piece is more Nazca-like than the last, not only in color, but in the treatment of the hair and in traces of cheek painting. Inasmuch as only the head was found in the tomb, there can be no absolute certainty that it was manufactured by people of Middle Cafiete culture. It may have been found in the ground by them when they dug the tomb, or picked up as a remnant from an earlier occupation of the hill, and included among the grave contents. The large jar shown in Plate LXXIV, Fig. 4, carries on its neck a Nazca B type head which is all painted, except for the modeled nose. Compare also Plate LXXIII, Fig. 4. Plate LXXVI, Fig. 1, shows another fragmentary figurine. This is unpainted and was hollow. Unfortunately, the head is lost. This is not from a grave, but from a trial hole in an area of Middle Cafiete remains. SHERDS Plate LXXVII, Figs. 1-3, shows a number of sherds found at spots x and z of site B; and Fig. 4, sherds from C. The letter B designates an area in and around the head of a gully which extends from the northwest edge of the hill nearly up to the central ruin R. The retain- ing walls facing this quebrada have been mentioned. There has been considerable fall and slide in the area, and it would require extensive and careful clearing to determine the time relations of walls, tombs, and deposits. Most of the sherds at B are typical Middle Cafiete in design. The same also holds for the colors used; the characteristic greenish white and dark maroon appear often. So far as the fragments show vessel shapes, they are also characteristic Cafiete. Thus the longitudinal fragments of Fig. 3 are all from low, steep-walled bowls. The same holds for Fig. 1, as regards the two bird designs. The three sherds with triangular heads in Fig. 1 suggest the conventionalized interlocking fish or serpent head, which his- torically first appears in Nazca B, so far as known; although they seem derivatives, not typical examples, of the pattern. The two uppermost sherds in Fig. 1 come nearer to Nazca ware in quality, especially the left-hand one with the fret which contains a definite gray, and is thin-walled and well polished. In Fig. 2 the upper right fragment is from the vertical wall of a low flat bowl. The background is greenish white, the ware thin and smooth, the rim at the top well finished. The two other fragments are thick and coarse ware, much more crudely painted. On one the background is greenish white, on the other orange yellow. The design motives suggest decadent Nazca B or Nazca Y. It would probably be impossible without a painstaking and expensive excavation to determine whether the pottery represented by these sherds dates from a pre-Middle Cafiete occupation of site B by a population of terminal Early Nazca period, or is all of Middle Cafiete origin with occasional absorptions or carry-overs of Nazca culture elements. 240 caSete valley SIMILARITIES OF THE POTTERY STYLE Nothing wholly positive emerges from the foregoing as to the place of Middle Cafiete in the Peruvian relative time scale. It is quite clear that there is no evidence of classic or pure Tiahuanaco influence. Neither will there probably be much more dissent from the finding that even Epigonal Tiahuanaco strains are at most lightly and dubiously represented. As to Early Nazca culture influence, there are numerous enough indications of this, in ware unquestionably made by the Middle Cafiete people themselves. Without exception, how- ever, the ware showing Nazca resemblance is mediocre. Also, the resemblances are not to early Nazca phase A, but to later Nazca B, and to its decadent form Y, though largely with- out the Tiahuanaco or highland admixture which appears in phase Y in Nazca Valley. As to post-Nazca and post-Tiahuanaco resemblances, there are suggestions, but little that one can put his finger on. The bowls with low vertical walls or recurved walls suggest Middle and Late lea forms. Occasional designs like those illustrated in Plate LXXI, Fig. 2, and Plate LXXIV, Fig. 3, have a Late appearance, but of a generic character, not any one localized style. The same may be said of Plates LXXI, Fig. 4, and LXXIV, Fig. 4. Here and there are suggestions of the geometric red-white-black style of the Coast of post-Tia- huanaco and pre-Inca period. But this red-white-black geometric is expressed in a variety of local phases, and a specimen like Plate LXXIV, Fig. 2, does not tie up with any of these. If we add that there is nothing specifically Inca or specifically Chimu apparent in the Middle Cafiete finds, we have exhausted the last of the potential similarities and relations. On the other side must be ranged the fact that the Middle Cafiete potters devised several distinctive types such as the conical sieves, or distinctive sub-types such as the low and plate- like bowls. While the art was not carried to any high perfection, it was executed at its best with competence and the formulation of a degree of style. The absorbed elements or similarities point southward to the region of lea and Nazca. There is no indication of influence from the north, and surprisingly little from the highland. The indicated time position is quite clearly post-Early Nazca and pre-Late Coast culture. This would mean in a general way the time of Tiahuanaco-Epigonal influencing of the Coast; but on account of the non-discovery to date of remains of this type in Cafiete Valley, it would be somewhat rash to assert that the Middle Cafiete culture was either earlier or later than Tiahuanaco or precisely contemporary with it. This placing of the pottery in the Middle Peruvian era, with some relation to or deriva- tion from terminal Early Nazca, agrees with the findings from the textiles, whose remains are less abundant than the pottery but point to the same relations and chronological horizon. MIDDLE PERIOD METAL WORK Metal is definitely rare in Middle Cafiete tombs. The contrast is marked with Late graves. The only specimen I found was 169697 in A-16, a small bell made of an oval sheet of copper 40 mm. wide folded over, the surface punched into "goose flesh" bosses 2-3 mm. apart; the clapper is a pebble: Plate LXXVII, Fig. 5. No trace of silver or gold appeared. The intactness to date of most Middle tombs argues against the occurrence of precious metal in the culture. MIDDLE PERIOD TEXTILES CLOTH Most of the Middle Cafiete fabrics found have been briefly included in the analyses on which Dr. L. M. O'Neale's and my summary in "Textile Periods in Ancient Peru"1 was ' Univ. Calif. Publ. Amer. Arch. Ethn., vol. 28, pp. 23-56, 1930. Middle Cafiete is called "Early Cafiete" in this publication. CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CANETE CULTURE 241 based. Plate 11 of that report shows three specimens from graves A-9 and A-16. Dr. O'Neale has been good enough to review all the twenty- three preserved specimens again, and intensively. Her analysis is given in full in Appendix VI, and illustrations of the more interesting techniques and designs are shown in Plates LXXXVIII to XC (see also Plate LXXIX, Fig. 7). It would be supererogation to add to this thorough examination by an expert, except to mention briefly a few general findings distinctive of the culture or significant of its time position. Fabrics wholly of cotton yarns number 15; of wool, 7; of cotton and wool, 0. Early coastal textiles from Nazca, lea, Paracas, and Supe use wool alone oftener than cotton and wool : 33 per cent as against 26 per cent. In the Middle period (Nazca, lea, Lima, Moche) and in Late times (Nazca, lea, Chincha, Ancon, Chancay, Moche) wool alone is only half as frequent as the combination: 26 vs 50, and 19 vs 36 per cent.1 No Middle Canete tapestries have been found. This again indicates antiquity. The percentage constituted by tapestry of total fabrics examined is: Early, 7; Middle periods, 44; Late, 29.2 Twill is exceedingly rare in Peru. Only two pieces have hitherto been recognized; one Late Nazca, one Middle (Proto-) Lima.3 The Middle Canete collection adds a third: A12- 169678b. Tie-dyeing is represented by NE18-170262a. This is perhaps the earliest specimen so decorated yet found in Peru. Its rivals are a Nazca Y-Epigonal and a "Proto-"Lima piece.4 Regularly interlocking warps and wefts, with scaffold or skeleton wefts, occur twice in the collection: NE18-170262b and 170322. This is a South Peruvian device, characteristic of Nazca and lea, and typical of Early and Middle periods, although not unknown in Late.5 It will be seen that the Middle Canete culture fabrics from Cerro del Oro point strongly toward Early or Middle and toward Nazca-Ica affiliations. BASKETRY, SLINGS, CORDAGE, SPINDLES Basketry was fairly abundant in the Middle Canete culture. Specimens were found in Tombs A-2, A-8, A-12b, A-16, NE-1, NE-20. Twilled work and wicker work are most common. There is also a wicker-and-twined specimen and a coiled one, but unfortunately neither of these is quite identifiable as to period. Plate LXXIX, Fig. 3, shows a flat twilled basket. It is 15 cm. in diameter; two other specimens from the same tomb (169698) measure 10 and 14 cm. The middle portion of this piece is almost flat for an area about 8 cm. square. At the corners of this square field the weaving elements are sharply twisted and pulled tight, resulting in four rigid spots from which the remainder of the basket turns upward. The courses of weaving beyond the corners also become increasingly circular to the edge of the basket. One of the accompany- ing baskets from the same tomb, which is less intact, shows an even sharper rise from the bottom to the rim. Plate LXXIX, Fig. 4, is also twilled, but in softer material. It is bag-shaped. The height seems to have been 10 cm., possibly more, the diameter somewhat less. Tomb NE-1 contained 170245, the remnant of one of the oblong twilled baskets which were so commonly used in ancient Peru to hold weaving and sewing materials, spindles, etc. 1 Ibid., Table 2, p. 28. • Ibid., Table 3, p. 32. 3 Ibid., Basic Table, at end. « Ibid. ' Ibid., Table 5, p. 50, and Basic Table. 242 caRete valley Wicker ware is represented by the fragment of a flat tray, something over 20 cm. in diameter, Plate LXXIX, Fig. 6. Unfortunately, this is from the one tomb (S-3) excavated by Hurtado, the age of which is ambiguous. (It contained two black jars which are typical Late Chincha, but also the typical Middle period bowl, Plate LXXI, Fig. 4. Hurtado regarded the tomb as Late. Possibly the bowl was found by the tomb diggers and included in its contents.) The specimen in question begins with six pairs of warps laid across each other. An extra warp is inserted in each pair during the outward progress of the basket, so that at the edge there are three rods in each of twenty-four warp units. One of each three is broken off, one turned to the left, and the third to the right, to form the edge. The single weft appears to be ordinary totora reed. The central 3 cm. of the basket consist simply of crossed warps without any weft. Then follow half a dozen courses of plain twining, after which the wicker weaving begins. Other specimens of wicker work, without associated twining, from tombs A-8, A-12b, NE-20, establish this technique as undoubtedly characteristic of Middle Cafiete culture. Plate LXXIX, Fig. 5, is a piece of coiled basketry 13 cm. from center to edge. The foundation appears to be a bundle of grass stems. Most of the stems are split, so that the number in a coil is not readily ascertainable in their present desiccated condition. The wrapping seems definitely tougher and stiff er. The coils average almost exactly 2 per cm.; the number of stitches, from 5 to 6 per cm. There is no trace of design. The workmanship is even and competent. Most of the wear on the basket appears to have been on the inside. The specimen was found at Site Bx. Most of the remains in this area were Middle Cafiete, but there were also a few Late objects and a series of sherds definitely more Nazca-like than most Middle Canete pottery. From the associations, I infer this coiled basket to be more probably Middle than Late in period, but the wicker-twined one the reverse. Braided Slings. — Plate XC, Fig. 2, is a braided sling of soft, brownish, maguey fiber. The part that holds the stone has the braid divided into six flat cords. At one end of the whole is the usual finger loop, at the other a long tuft or tassel of fiber, roughly braided into a knot at the end. This piece is described by Dr. O'Neale in Appendix VI. Two other slings, No. 169836, were found at Site Bx and seem Late in appearance. One of these has the center done in red and yellow Kelim tapestry. Cord and Rope. — The outer lashings of mummies are frequently merely rude two-ply twists of totora. In somewhat better-made cord and rope, both two-ply and three-ply occur. For instance: F30-169849 includes a soft and rather loose-twist two-ply cord, averaging 5 mm. in thickness, and a harder twisted three-ply averaging about 4 mm. Spindles and Spindle Whorls. — For some reason these objects suffered the heaviest post-excavation casualties of any class of specimens excavated by me. At the present writing only one intact Middle Canete spindle whorl is available, NEl-170245b of Hurtado's collecting, Plate LXXXIII, Fig. 21. This is of pottery, cylindrical, 42 by 10 mm. It is incised with diamonds. These are roughened and then painted red and blue. The incisions separat- ing them are filled with yellow, and the two ends of the cylinder have a row of white angles painted on a blackish ground. The painting was obviously done after the spool was fired. Pottery spindle whorls, frequently painted in red, yellow, blue, and white on black or dark brown are typical of both Middle and Late Canete. The period difference is in the shape. Middle period whorls are cylindrical, Late ones roughly globular (Plates LXXXIII, Figs. 16-20; LXXXVI, Fig. 12). The Late ones usually have the pottery surface bur- nished black, and only the incised lines are painted. The Middle cylinders are less intensely black in the ware, and the whole surface is more frequently painted over. CERRO DEL ORO: MIDDLE CANETE CULTURE 243 The habit of incising and painting pottery whorls is evidently a distinctive local Canete habit which persisted from one period to the other. However, there is also a recognizable stylistic difference between the periods. MIDDLE PERIOD: VARIOUS I list for record and for possible comparative use in future studies a number of odd items found. F30-169846 is a bone awl and a piece of slate brought to an edge. NE18-170263 and NE20-170277 are bundles of split canes, respectively 19 and 20 cm. long. They may have served as counters or been kept prepared for some technological or practical use. NE18-170260 consists of two wooden pegs or tops, conical below, cylindrical above. The larger is 7.5 cm. long, 5 cm. in diameter; the smaller, respectively 7 and 4.5 cm. Gourds are abundant in Middle Canete tombs. In fact, poorer tombs sometimes contain nothing but gourds. These vessels are fragile and they only occasionally survived excavation, sub- sequent handling, and transport. None were found with pyrographic or other ornament. NE18- 170265 is sausage-shaped, 25 cm. in length and from 5 to 6 cm. in diameter. Several small gourd vessels from Tomb A-16 are shown in Plate LXXVII, Fig. 6. No. 169837 is a well-preserved piece of soft yellowish leather, which in North America would be taken for buckskin. It is a roughly cut rectangular piece of skin, folded twice as if for wrapping, and with a cord for tying at one end. The longer edge appears to have been irregularly cut into as if for a sort of zigzag fringe. There are also three rows of small holes in the skin, as if a cord had been meant to be drawn through these. These holes have been simply stabbed through with a knife. The dimensions of the leather are something over 30x20 cm. The piece was found in the area Bx, next to a fragment of a comb. The skin is so thoroughly pliable as to suggest no great age. On the other hand, it seems unlikely that a modern Peruvian would drop a good piece of leather on an ancient ruin. The specimen is mentioned here on account of the rarity of preserved objects of skin from prehistoric Peru. As already stated, no determi- nation of age could be made for anything found at the quebrada-head Bx without more thorough excavating than it seemed advisable to undertake. Coca leaves filled three small pouches A16-169698e-g. The determination by the Museum's Depart- ment of Botany is Erythroxylon coca Lam. It is significant in view of the period and the coastal location. LATE PERIOD AT CERRO DEL ORO I recovered only enough Late material at Cerro del Oro to determine its relations to Middle period remains. The Middle culture being up to that time unknown, it seemed best to devote all possible effort and time to its exploration. The Late remains are in every way identical with those at Cerro Azul. There were undoubtedly some rich Late tombs on the Cerro del Oro, especially in the walled cemetery of site C; but these are precisely the burials which have been destroyed in the search for metal. Most of the untouched graves which remain are those of middle or lower class people. In those which I opened I found no gold, only traces of silver, and not much copper. It seems more profitable not to describe separately the Late material from Cerro del Oro, but to refer to the following account of the finds at Cerro Azul, in which Cerro del Oro Late items have been included. III. CERRO AZUL: LATE CANETE CULTURE As already indicated, the Late culture of Cafiete is very similar to the Late culture of Chincha, the next valley to the south. The two are no more than local variants of the same type. If in these pages I speak of Chincha culture in Cafiete, there is no implication that people originating in Chincha Valley moved north to occupy Cafiete Valley. The cultural relation is not one of complete identity but of a strong and pervading similarity. Cerro Azul is the harbor town for the whole of Cafiete Valley. Like all Peruvian ports, it is an open harbor, formed by a projecting headland which gives shelter from the prevailing south and southwest winds. This headland consists of a rocky cerro, or rather two such, the smaller having its cliff-like face washed by the ocean, the larger being a short distance inland and extending parallel with the shore (Plan, Plate LXXXI). On a narrow strip of beach to the north of these masses of rock are the pier, warehouses, customs office, and terminals of the network of little freight railways which radiate out from here. In most weathers the shelter for ships is good, although open to the northwest. Beyond the cerro, the flat beach stretches northward with a gradual westerly curve. Back of this beach stands the pueblo or town as distinct from the puerto or harbor facilities proper.1 The name of both harbor and town is derived from that of the hills, which, at least at certain seasons of the year, have a definitely bluish tinge as seen from a distance. The two rocky massifs are connected by a swell of ground and look like a unit. They rise up boldly and are visible for long distances both at sea and over the flat floor of the valley. While the modern harbor is at the north foot of the cerro, the ancient ruins are on the south side. They stand thickest in the angle formed by the smaller seaward hill and the main one (Plate LXXX, Figs. 1, 3, 4). Here is an approximately rectangular area of sandy soil between the cerro and the surf, its north end shut off by the smaller hill, its south opening into the flat, uncultivated coastal plain. The terraces and pyramids cluster most thickly at the northern end of this rectangular area. They are particularly numerous and impressive around a central leveled plaza. They tend to tier up from this onto the lower slopes of the hill. The sketch map shown in Plate LXXXI gives the general relations of the principal structures to one another and to the topography. It is literally a sketch, made by eye and by walking over the ground, without actual measurements. I have assigned each principal pyramid or terrace a letter to help in making the record of specimen locality more definite. All of the structures are of adobe. All are flat pyramids or terraces. There is nothing which could be construed as a building with walls and rooms. The site must have been one of cult, rather than a town or capital. Back of the pyramids that reach uphill, the steep slopes of the cerro are more or less worked into narrow, irregular, straggling terraces, whose effect from below is reminiscent of the horizontal cowpaths often encircling pasture hills in California (Plate LXXX, Fig. 5). These terraces are of insufficient width to contain buildings and probably represent the result of efforts to construct tombs on the hillside. There is nothing that could be called genuine soil on the cerro slope. Where the surface is not bare rock it is disintegrated rock, with more or less windblown sand mixed in. In this insecure footing, tending constantly to slide, the poorer people made the graves of their dead, digging somewhat into the surface of the hill and supplementing with crude constructions, partly of adobe and partly of loose rock. 1 E. W. Middendorf, Peru, II, 1894, in his account of Cafiete Valley, pp. 126-144, has a sketch plan of Cerro Azul which agrees none too well with mine. 244 CERRO AZUL: LATE CANETE CULTURE 245 All the pyramids and all the cerro slopes give evidence of having been dug into in the search for treasure. But there is no indication that anything notable was found, because there is no sector which has been deeply turned over. Evidently there was no habit of bury- ing either wealthy people or chiefs at Cerro Azul. Why this was so is hard to understand, in view of the amount of building construction around the plaza, and the scattered poor graves here and there. In this respect there is a marked contrast between this group of ruins and the area C on the Cerro del Oro, where there is little in the way of structures except enclosing walls, but where the diggers' reward in silver and gold must have been rich, and the graves were clustered close. No traces of any culture but Late were encountered at Cerro Azul. POTTERY Late pottery from Cerro Azul and Cerro del Oro is most often smoked black, not infre- quently plain red. Red vessels with painted design were rare in my experience, nor do the scattered sherds suggest they were formerly numerous. The design is poorly executed technologically, and in several of the few vessels discovered the paint had mostly scaled off, or was lost after excavation. What there is of design suggests Late Chincha inferior ware without attempt at elaborate pattern.1 On the whole, the ware is definitely poor, even where the modeling has been done with competence. The paste is thick, not particularly well smoothed, and often gray instead of black. The chief exception is provided by occasional small flask-like vessels which are well smoked and well burnished. Incidentally, it is a local peculiarity that the small jars are almost invariably found inside the mummy wrappings. Even medium-sized jars are perhaps as often bundled in with the mummy as set beside it. This habit holds for the Late burials at Cerro del Oro as well as at Cerro Azul. The pottery shapes also show no great variety. Jars predominate. These have almost always a high and often wide neck. Also there are almost always two handles, usually below the neck; although handles at the neck, vessels with single handle, and vessels without handle do occur. The most frequent form is amphora-like: a body longer than wide, and sloping toward a point or a quite narrow flattened base. From this shape there are transi- tions to an almost globular one. In the latter case the neck diameter is of medium width. When the vessel is elongated and conical-bottomed, the neck or mouth is sometimes nearly as wide as the body. Occasionally there is a piece that is somewhat flattened — oval in cross section — and very small toy-like jars may be asymmetrical. Plates LXXXII and LXXXIII indicate the range of shapes as well as sizes. It seems unnecessary to go into more detailed description. The chief differences from Late Chincha ware, as described by Strong and myself on the basis of Uhle's collection formed for the University of California in excavations near Tambo de Mora,2 is that the Canete ware is on the whole coarser in quality, contains a higher frequency of amphoras and a lower frequency of round-bellied jars and other shapes, less often carries a design, and in the majority of instances is smoked black. All of these, however, are differences of proportion only. Blackware occurs in a considerable proportion of cases in the Uhle collection.3 In fact, I suspect that the high frequency of design-painted ware in his Chincha collection is due to his having dug mainly in the graves of the well-to-do. As one walks over the Tambo de Mora ruins in Chincha and notes the sherds and surface 1 Kroeber and Strong, The Uhle Collections from Chincha, Univ. Calif. Publ. Amer. Arch. Ethn., vol. 21, No. 1, pp. 1-54, 1924. 2 Ibid. ' Fifty-six out of 164 vessels or 34 per cent: Univ. Calif. Publ. Amer. Arch. Ethn., vol. 21, p. 252, 1925. 246 caNete valley debris, or inspects the finds which huaqueros or local amateurs have assembled, one has the impression that blackware forms a larger proportion of average Late Chincha pottery than in the Uhle sample. This tends to equate the two valleys. Pottery showing specific Inca features is scarce at both Canete sites, definitely rarer than in the Uhle Chincha collection. I did not find or see a single aryballos, nor any other vessel of indubitable Inca form. The only pieces secured which are definitely reminiscent of Cuzco are purchased handles of Inca plates, Nos. 169574-6. One, a cat-head, is polished black; another, modeled into a deer hoof, is reddish buff. They are evidently fragments, and have had the broken edge ground off, no doubt by a modern owner. These specimens are without authentic provenience, but were secured from a small amateur collector in the harbor town, and, if not actually from the Cerro Azul ruins as alleged, they are no doubt from some other near-by point in Canete Valley. Plate LXXXIV, Fig. 1, shows portions of a large white-slipped jar with red and black design. This I excavated in Burial 3, in the west front of Pyramid B. Only a small part of the vessel was recovered. Either the parts found had been reburied, or the missing portions had been lost when the sand slid away. The walls are from 8 to 10 mm. thick, the paste fairly coarse, but the workmanship even. The illustration shows one handle and the red and black painted design, which depicts an animal resembling a dragon. Parts of several such figures appear among the sherds recovered; the drawing combines these into a complete figure. Similar to this is the fragment of a large pottery vessel from Hacienda San Benito, shown in Fig. 2 of the same Plate. This is painted in black and red on a white slip and shows the same monster head. There is also a hollow human face molded on the shoulder. The slip and pigments used, as well as the paste, are closely similar in the two specimens. The present one is slightly heavier, the ware running from 11 to 12 mm. in thickness. No. 169581 is fragments from a very large and coarsely made vessel, or more likely from two. Coarse grit was used for tempering, which has baked to the surface on the outside. The inside was apparently given a coating of somewhat finer clay before firing. Four of the pieces run to a consistent thickness of 25 mm. The rim sherds have a lip turned out at an angle of some 30 degrees. The largest fragment increases from 24 to 35 mm. in thickness just before the neck rim, which is turned nearly at right angles to the vessel wall. Both these vessels must have been nearly a meter in diameter; large enough, in short, that they could have been used as a bath tub or salt pan or something of that sort. Why they should have been buried in the sandy fill of one of the lower pyramids near the beach is hard to imagine. A pottery figurine is shown in Plate LXXXV, Fig. 5. This is 150 mm. in length. The paste is pale reddish, slipped with white, which has been well smoothed. The head is painted red. The figurine is female, and similar to those found in Late remains in Chincha Valley.1 For another specimen, see below, under "Various." Also of pottery, in most cases, are spindle whorls. Five of these, from both Cerro Azul and Cerro del Oro, are shown in Plate LXXXIII, Figs. 16-20. The shape is more or less spherical, in contrast with the cylindrical whorls of Middle period. Some are plain smoked black, some smoked black with incisions overpainted after firing, and some are reddish. The diameter is usually not far from 15 mm. These also have close Chincha affiliations.2 Compare also the Late spindle whorls in the cache described below and shown in Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 12. 1 Op. «/., Plate 14. ' Ibid., Plates 16-18. CERRO azul: late caRete culture 247 CLOTH The Late textile fabrics found at both Cerro Azul and Cerro del Oro were mostly frag- mentary or in poor condition. They are so patently similar to Late textiles from all along the central Peruvian coast, which are by now well known and abundantly illustrated, as to need no special discussion, particularly as no notably fine pieces were encountered. One specimen may be excepted. Plate LXXXV, Fig. 1, shows a piece of painted veiling doubled and end-twisted to serve as a headband. This type of gauze or veil cloth is common enough in Peru — the inter- est in the present instance is in the painting. This is in two (or more?) shades of brown, and the patterns were applied after the gauze had been doubled and stitched into its present shape, the paint running through from the upper to the lower fabric. METAL Metal is definitely more abundant in Late than in Middle Canete times. Most mummies had copper or occasionally silver sheets or ornaments bestowed about the head, most fre- quently perhaps in the mouth, but also about the ears or elsewhere on the face. Where the metal is entirely corroded it shows in green stains on the bone or teeth, as previously men- tioned. This burial habit prevails for the Late period of all parts of the Peruvian coast which I have visited, from north of Trujillo to south of Nazca, frequently even as regards the graves of the poor. The most frequent disposal is of a round or oval sheet of thin metal about the size of a coin, apparently laid on the tongue — a sort of Charon's obol. Copper must have been fairly abundant in order that it could be used as regularly as this; for instance, even in the group burials of relatively poor people at Cerro Azul, who were as a rule put away with at most one or two pottery vessels of rather meager quality and dressed in wrappings of no distinction. VARIOUS OBJECTS The following are various objects of more or less interest from Cerro Azul, but which, unless specifically mentioned, were not found in tombs : A small llama in pottery, No. 169483, from Quebrada 7. A sherd with characteristic Late lea beveled lip, No. 169484, from near Pyramid I. The painted pattern is mostly gone, but the remnants of it suggest Late Chincha-Ica style.1 Five unpainted sherds of varying size and thickness, each bored with from one to three holes, are shown in Plate LXXXIV, Fig. 3. They are from Pyramid H. Three of the sherds have strings of two-ply cotton through the holes. In fact, two of the three are still tied together. The sherds look as if they had been roughly hacked out. The holes are up to 7 mm. in diameter. All have been bored, or, perhaps more exactly, gouged, from the outer or convex side of the sherd, with a conical point. The qualification as to gouging is made because several of the holes are not truly circular. One or two of them show a little drilling from the inner side, but not much. No. 169488 comprises a parcel of sherds with design in Late Chincha or lea style, but crudely executed. They are also from Pyramid H. No. 169493, from near Quebrada 6, shown in Plate LXXXV, Fig. 3, is a double-headed stone figure only 34 mm. high and rudely carved. It may represent two persons in one blanket. A similar, smaller specimen occurred in the cache described separately below. No. 169494, from near quebradas 6 and 7, is a pottery figurine of Chincha type similar to the Late one from Cerro del Oro illustrated in Plate LXXXV, Fig. 5, but smaller. The length from the genitals to the top of the head is 85 mm. No. 169515 is a seated pottery figurine from Quebrada 2. 1 Kroeber and Strong, Chincha, as cited, 1924, Figs. 12, 16. 248 caRete valley No. 169495, a lump of reddish purple paint, was found with a shell. This and the next are also from the area of quebradas 6-7. A small sherd of smoked blackware, No. 169497, has the appearance of having been lead-glazed on the outer side. The metallic luster is definitely marked, but may have been produced by contact with something in the ground. A small stone carving of a maize ear, or rather of two ears, is No. 169501, from Quebrada 7. No. 169502, from Quebrada 1, is a small pottery whistle on a string. No. 169503 is wool which my highland Indian workmen declared to be vicuna. No. 169509, from Quebrada 1, is a small chisel of bronze, corroded. The lower half of a fox's leg (Dusicyon sechurae) was found in association with some Ica-like frag- ments of pottery and fragments of striped cloth, a crude sling, and two shells (No. 169514, from Quebrada 2). The fox's leg has fragments of soft cotton string adhering to it. The fur is short and yellowish. The sling is peculiar in that its center piece is a narrow strip of hide with soft brown fur. This fur is mostly gone, but was evidently quite short. The skin averages 4-5 mm. in thickness and the strip is only about 10 mm. wide. Nos. 169542-43-44 were found in Burial 3, in the west front of Pyramid B, with the fragmentary large jar No. 169541 shown in Plate LXXXIV, Fig. 1. One of the three pieces is a rock crystal. The second is a fragment of a wooden tablet, carved with a repeating pattern of conventionalized birds (Plate LXXXV, Fig. 4). The rectangles enclosing the bird figures have been painted red. The tablet has been cut across the grain of the hard wood used. Perhaps for this reason it broke in antiquity. The piece retrieved is bored with four small holes, through which cotton twine has been passed and lashed from one hole to another — no doubt also across the break to the missing part of the tablet. The string appears to be three-ply. One original edge of the tablet has been preserved : this is incised in alternating brown and red diamonds. The third specimen of this lot is a balance, No. 169544, Plate LXXXV, Fig. 2. The dimensions of the beam, of hard dark wood, probably huarango, are 168 x 25 x 13 mm. The beam is un- ornamented and slightly curved. The curvature appears to have followed the grain of the wood, rather than to be due to subsequent warping. Instead of scale-pans, a net was attached to each end of the beam, according to a well-known Peruvian variant. The nets are hung by two strings, not three; they are of a fine hard fiber, apparently neither cotton nor wool, probably maguey; the heavier cord from which the scale beam balances appears to be cotton. All the suspensions are by an informal knot tied just large enough to prevent the cord from slipping through the perforation. Compare Chincha, as cited, Figs. 20, 21. Two dog skulls, Nos. 169604-05, were found in the cemetery in tombs 4, 5, 7, but apparently not associated with any grave. The burial of such skulls appears to have been a local habit, irrespective of period, since Middle culture graves A-l, A-4, A-12, A-15-16 at Cerro del Oro also contained dog skulls (see Appendix II). No. 169606 is the remnants of a pouch of guinea-pig skin filled with cinnabar. This is from the north platform of Pyramid D, on which we made our camp. In fact, the object lay in the sand only a few inches under my sleeping bag, which, in the course of a week or two, worked away enough of the sand for the red paint to show one morning. This is typical of the way artifacts are distributed at Cerro Azul. What is discovered in tombs is usually of meager quality and in poor condition. Specimens of better workmanship turn up with apparent randomness in the sandy fills in or around the terrace-pyramids. Most such objects are too good to have been outright refuse. Perhaps they were deposited as votive offerings, some of which, as the terraces were later extended, may have been moved, broken, or scattered with the sandy soil in which they had been put away. My Cerro Azul grave excavations happened to yield no "chalk" (diatomaceous earth), but several Late tombs on the Cerro del Oro did: Nos. 169749 (C-22); 169763 (near C-22); 169863 (near C-31); 170292 (Hurtado, S-3, "Chincha" type). Another piece occurs in the cache described below. These lumps of material are also known from Late graves at Chincha.1 My workmen suggested that the chalk was rubbed on the fingers before spinning. 1 Kroeber and Strong, 1924, p. 29. cerro azul: late caRete culture 249 A CACHE My most remarkable find at Cerro Azul is a cache or deposit which had been buried in the slope of Quebrada 1, the most seaward gully, which runs up from the foot of Pyramid B northward into the northwest cerro. Here, two of my workmen, while I was elsewhere in the ruins, encountered what seemed to them a small mummy wrapped in white cotton cloth. It lay near the surface — perhaps only a foot or so down; there were no signs of tomb wall; and the bundle hung together well. They therefore dug it out and then called me. Plate LXXX, Fig. 2, shows the object as uncovered. The photograph reveals its superficial position in the slope, as well as the half-disintegrated rock of which the "soil" was composed. The cubical shape of the find seemed strange for a mummy, and as soon as the outer wrapping was removed, the parcel proved to contain a set of objects and materials mainly connected with textile fabrication, very snugly and compactly packed together, and for some reason deposited among the shallow burials on the slope of Quebrada 1 : perhaps accompanying a corpse or in lieu of a missing corpse, but possibly as an offering or for safe-keeping. The ingenious stowing of the contents in bundles, and the neat tying together of these into the larger parcel, suggest that the owner of the outfit carefully arranged his own effects as he would want to find them again, whether in another world or after a journey or temporary absence in this one. The effect is quite different from all tomb gifts or equipment found by me in Cafiete, whether of Middle or Late period. Equally remarkable is the good preservation, which contrasts with the decay and cor- rosion, even of pottery slip, characterizing nearly all graves opened, especially at Cerro Azul. The whole site is exposed to constant fog for half the year, and Quebrada 1 lies par- ticularly open to the prevailing south to southwest wind. The splendid condition of this deposit, in view of its shallow covering of rocky soil, must therefore be due mainly to the care with which it was packed and wrapped and rewrapped, possibly also in part to the absence of body-juices, which in burials presumably often increase rot and decay. At any rate, however it came to be, we have here somebody's outfit of tools, materials, amulets, and prized possessions arranged exactly as he or she carefully arranged them four hundred or more years ago, and but slightly deteriorated by age. The personal touch of the owner is evident. The value of the find is not so much in the individual objects, as in the fact and nature of their assemblage into a unit. The contents group as follows: No. 169559, white cotton cloth enclosing the whole. In this were two primary parcels, which I call A and B. A was again wrapped in a cotton cloth, 169547. Inside this was an oblong twilled basket, 169545; and, lying on or beside this, three loose objects, 169546a-c. The basket itself is 169545a; the contents, 169545, as listed below. B was wrapped in a rough cloth, 169558. Inside this was a coarse but soft cloth, 169557. In this were four parcels, which we will call Bl, B2, B3, B4, each wrapped again in a cotton cloth, respectively 169550, 169552, 169554, 169556. The four sub-parcels in B contained the following: Bl, 169548, a net sack and its contents as listed below; also 169549, two heavy pieces of shell and a wool cord. B2, 169551, a bundle of skeins of yarn, wool(?), and cotton. B3, 169553, a cluster of balls of thread of different colors. B4, 169555, a large ball of white thread. The detailed contents of A, Bl, B2, B3, B4, will now be given with reference to the pieces illustrated in Plates LXXXVI and LXXXVII. 250 caSete valley BASKET AND CONTENTS: PARCEL A, 169545 Twilled basket, with folding top: 36x22x10 cm. Cane flute, 195 mm. long, 19-22 in diam. Bore 16 mm. at mouth end, 11 at butt. Mouth end cut off somewhat diagonally, with a rounded notch in line with the stops, c. 7 mm. deep, 9 wide. Seven stops, c. 7 mm. diam.; separated by 17, 15, 14, 15, 14, 16 mm.; 21 to notch, 23 to butt. Three thread lashings; groove for fourth near butt. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 14. Three small gourd vessels: shallow, circular, 60 mm. diam.; half pear shape, 82x68 mm., c. 38 mm. deep; tube-like, 82 mm. long, diam. of opening 10-11 mm., maximum diam., near bottom end, 26 mm. Comb, 100x62 mm. Cover, splints twilled with brown cotton thread; ends, a black, hard gum or pitch. Spines, aver, projection, 20 mm.; 26 remain, 13-14 lost. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 4. Wooden ear-plug, probably of algorrobo. Diam. 38 mm., inner diam. 26, 11 mm. thick, edge c. 3 mm., concave. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 3. Stone carving, crude face on one side, load of maize(?) on back, 47x30x14 mm. max. diam. Stone bluish gray, hard, parts of original surface of pebble remaining. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 7. Whitish stone carving, two heads out of one blanket, like Plate LXXXV, Fig. 3. Height 21 mm. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 6. Small carved stone, pear or pendant shape, 13 mm. high; base rubbed flat. Balance weight(?). Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 5. Pyrrhotite, magnetic iron sulphide; several rubbed surfaces; dimensions about 35x27x28 mm. Weight, 81 grams. Ball, about 15 mm. diam., of lead; surface, thin film of grayish white; inside cuts with a knife, leaden luster. Weight, 19 grams. This piece has not been analyzed, but its specific gravity is 11.17, very near that of pure lead. Scrapings from the surface when analyzed gave lead and no other metal in quantity, according to Chief Curator of Geology H. W. Nichols. So far as I know, pure lead has hitherto not been discovered in prehistoric Peruvian remains. The spherical shape of the casting, and the size, suggest a musket ball of about 0.60 inch caliber. If so, the whole cache would be of Conquest or Early Colonial period. But then, why the bronze knife, the silver needle, and over a hundred objects of native material and manufacture without a trace of anything European? It seems more probable that besides silver, copper, and tin the Peruvians occasionally also smelted and cast lead. Either way, the little ball is signifi- cant historically. Quartz crystal, 43 mm. long, diam. 12 mm. at one end, 7 at other. Small flake of translucent flint or chert, one edge good, traces of red paint; 23x16 mm. Lump of "chalk," that is, diatomaceous earth, 63x58x25 mm.; most surfaces show rubbing away. Weight, 20 grams. Slab, c. 48x27x8 mm., of fine-grained blackish stone, probably flint, surface similar to touchstone; both surfaces and all edges much rubbed down. Weight, 21 grams. Blackish hard-grained pebble. Gray pebble, conical or triangular, base rubbed flat and smooth; 21 mm. Fossilized hinged shell (?). Half of heavy Counts shell, edges much rubbed down, all surfaces worn; 75x65 mm. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 2. Bone receptacle of posterior part of a skunk (Conepatus inca) skull; one end plugged. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 1. Two concretions or molluscan tubes. Six empty spindles wrapped in a cotton cloth. Two unpainted, 262, 265 mm. long; four painted (Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 12), 284-291 mm., diam. 3-4 mm. Painting: white, yellow, red, black. Whorls: oval, conical, biconical, pear-shaped. Colors: blackish gray; purplish red; yellow with red band on which are yellow dots and white circles; red with white dots; black with red base band, both with white dots; same, two red bands. Loose whorl, conical, red with black central band. CERRO AZUL: LATE GAMETE CULTURE 251 Gauze veiling cloth, one end white, one brown, the latter much decayed. Contained five wound spindles, silver needle, bone awl, as follows: Five spindles wound with cotton thread; 260-290 mm. long; diam. of wound bobbin, 20-45 mm. The whorls can be felt with certainty inside the three thinner ones. Silver needle, patinated like bronze; 95 mm. long, diam. c. 1 mm.; point fairly sharp but sudden, like a piece of pinched-off wire, without taper. The eye is a slit on one side, a very small hole on the other; remnants of fine thread. Just below the eye, a slack-twist cotton cord or thick thread has been wound around the needle, as if to protect a remnant of thread. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 9 (upper). Fine bone awl, 155 mm. long, slender, surface polished with use. The upper two-thirds woven into a red-brown-white case or handle, terminating in a 40 mm. tassel of sixteen red wool threads. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 11. Gauzy cloth, one-half white, other brown, the latter with a red braided edge, containing five spindles and two other sticks, as follows : Five spindles wound or half- wound with cotton thread, three white, two brown; in two the spindles are still visible, in the three others they can be felt. Length, 250-265 mm. There is also an empty spindle 217 mm. long. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 8. Weaving batten, 287 x 15 mm.; hard, dark wood. Spindle or bobbin 332 mm. long, 6 in diam., taper mostly toward one end, the other with a cap or button of close-twist thread. A little brown cotton thread is desultorily wound around the upper third. Similar (but not out of the same cloth wrapping) is a red-painted spindle 265 mm. long, diam. 4.5 mm., taper all one way, other end capped with a black seed(?) 12 mm. in diam., which is loose but does not detach. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 13. A cloth, similar to the last except with small checker pattern instead of white portion, enclosed a bundle. This bundle appears to contain a few small crooked, woody twigs roughly wrapped in totora(?) reed tied with cotton string. Bladder(?) or guinea-pig skin, tied with string, and wrapped in a torn piece of cotton cloth; about 12 x 9 cm. Length of agave-fiber braid rope, tapering off at one end. Three small balls of cotton thread, tan, dark brown, white. A wad of hair, c. 90 x 70 mm., in a few lashings of reed. Dark brown, seemingly human. A black hardwood needle, 84 mm., end flattened, contains circular eye. Below this, a wad of owl(?) or down feathers is wrapped on. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 9 (lower). Fifteen spines, 90-110 mm. long, most of them still bearing at the butt rovings or tufts of unspun cotton. Plate LXXXVI, Fig. 10. OUTSIDE THE BASKET BUT WRAPPED IN PARCEL A: 169546 Wad of human hair, c. 18 x 14 x 6 cm., folded in a knotted square piece of coarse brownish gauze. Weight of hair, 110 grams. Three wooden pegs or stakes, 32-34 cm. long, 1.5-2 cm. diam., one end sharpened, the other roughly rounded. The knife strokes are plain. There is also a fragment, 20 cm. long, of a fourth shar- pened stick, 12-13 mm. diam. Peg- or top-shaped object of huarango wood, cylindrical, then notched, then sharpened to a point. Length over-all 140 mm., diam. 38-42. Notch 8-11 mm. deep, 20-30 wide. Cylindrical and conical portions each c. 60 mm. long. Plate LXXXVII, Fig. 6. Weaving batten, 294 x 13 mm., of cane or light wood. Unpointed spindle, 266 mm. long, wound to thickness of c. 26 mm. with dirty white cotton crepe thread. Small ball of cotton or fiber thread, and another of fiber. 252 caSete valley PARCEL Bl, 169548-9 Net sack with drawstring, c. 23 x 15 cm., 4.5 mm. knotted mesh. Probably maguey. Plate LXXXVII, Fig. 2. This held the next seven items, which together constitute No. 169548. Cylindrical net object, c. 15 cm. wide, 47 cm. in circumference; 3.5 mm. mesh; maguey thread, heavier than in last. Complementary pattern in red and bluish green, the figures separated by one strand of natural tan thread. Use wholly problematical, but the cylinder would have fitted a human head. Plate LXXXVII, Figs. 3, 3a. Fragments of a similar net, finer thread and mesh, remnants of pattern, apparently also cylindrical. This appears to have been old and torn when deposited. Three hanks or winds of neat maguey string, and a fourth untied and beginning to snarl. Two skeins or rovings of soft maguey fiber. Square of cloth, brown and tan small check, c. 26 x 34 cm. Sewn down the middle, but one long edge torn off; one short end cut off, apparently with four separate knife cuts. Forty-three half-spools of hard, dark wood, probably huarango, tied together. Plate LXXXVII, Fig. 1. Two breaks. The three lengths contain eighteen spools, 68.5 cm. long; ten, 36.0; fifteen, 50.5; total forty-three, length 1.55 meters, or, on allowance for two ruptures, 1.58. Somewhat more than half of this length would be the wooden spools or beads, the remainder, string. Each spool is a % cylinder, hour-glass notched toward the middle. Each is sepa- rately strung to the next as shown in Plate LXXXVII, Fig. 1; a self-knot alone keeps the string from slipping out of its hole. The largest spool is only about 5 mm. longer than the shortest, but almost twice as broad (27 vs 14 mm.) and thick, and must weigh four times as much. Necklace or other personal adornment? Bronze lunate or tumi knife, with wrapped handle and wrist cord. Plate LXXXVII, Fig. 4. From end to end of blade, 114 mm. In the same parcel Bl, but outside the net sack, were 169549, a 9-strand (3 threes) braid of white wool 72 cm. long, 3-4 mm. wide; and two pieces of Spondylus shell. These have been hacked or broken off, but one edge has been rubbed smooth. They measure about 10 x 8 cm. each and weigh 211 and 165 grams. PARCEL B2, 169551 Six skeins of thread, each crushed together, but each ready for winding. Three are tan, one whitish, one red, one dark blue or "black"; the last appears to be wool and is really two skeins. The thread is crepe-twisted, especially the cotton. Weights of the six skeins in order, 205, 196, 101, 56, 109, 102 (+57) grams. The skeins are suspended on loops of totora reed. Their lengths are 70, 52, 46, 36, 51, 42 (and 48) cm. Three balls of blackish thread. PARCEL B3, 169553 Fifteen balls of cotton thread, from 35 to 90 mm. diam. Two are white (including the largest); three tan (one darker), two brown; two red (one more rusty); six of as many hues ranging from dark blue to greenish. Small wad of human hair, in a twisted cloth. Square-braid cord, 40 x 0.5 x 0.5 cm. Bone awl, blunt, 86 mm. long, on 40 cm. 3-ply cord. The cord passes through a hole in the end into the hollow part of the bone, where it is knotted; the other end has a loop through which the awl can be slipped for suspension. Plate LXXXVII, Fig. 5. PARCEL B4, 169555 Ball of fine white cotton thread, c. 9.5 cm. diam. The thread is wound on in flat masses, not singly. IV. SUMMARY Two cultures are apparent in pre-Hispanic Canete Valley, a Late and a Middle. The Late Canete culture is nearly identical with the Late culture of Chincha, and closely related to that of lea and Rio Grande (Nazca) valleys. It is the only culture represented at Cerro Azul and the upper one of two at Cerro del Oro. It agrees with the Chincha culture in shapes of pottery vessels, figurines, Kelim and other tapestry, abundance of copper, presence of bronze, silver, and presumably gold, the habit of erecting clusters of pyramids, non-deformation of skulls; and even in minor features, such as the occurrence of balances and diatomaceous earth in graves. Minor variations from Chincha are a somewhat greater proportion of blackware, and inferior execution of painted ware; more frequent painting- over of incisions in blackware spindle whorls; and absence or near-absence of specific Inca (Cuzco) types. However, this last difference is only relative, because Kroeber and Strong distinguished a Late Chincha phase I unassociated with Inca types, and a Late Chincha phase II associated with them, among Uhle's grave finds in Chincha. The Middle Canete culture is known only from Cerro del Oro, where it underlies the Late — physically in spots, and inferentially everywhere in time. Its chief characteristics are: 1. Frontal deformation of skulls. 2. Cubical, hand-made adobe bricks. 3. Walls and terraces rather than pyramids or buildings. 4. Metal rare, and so far as known only copper. 5. 6. Rarity of tapestry weaves and of use of cotton and wool in the same garment. 7. Occurrence of interlocking warps and wefts, with scaffold or skeleton wefts. 8. Cylindrical spindle whorls of pottery, incised and over-painted. 9. Double-spout jars, the spouts tapering and spreading. 10. Painted and modeled women's faces, with long almond eyes. 11. Similar figurines of pottery. 12. Pottery Pan's pipes, triangular. 13. Conical sieves of pottery. 14. "Cumbrous" bowls of somewhat aberrant design, and less heavy than elsewhere. 15. Footed and unfooted flat bowls with vertical walls or incurved lip. 16. No pottery shapes or designs of definite Tiahuanaco or other highland type. 17. Gourd vessels abundant, but without pyrography or ornament. 18. Basketry fairly frequent; twilled, wicker probably coiled, possibly twined also. 19. Coca. Of these traits, 8, 13, 14, 15, and perhaps 18 are local peculiarities. Traits 1, 3, 4, 7, 10, 12 are Early Nazca; 9 is typical of terminal Early Nazca, Y; 2 of "Proto-Lima," that is, Middle Lima (Tiahuanacoid-Highland and terminal Early Nazca influence) ; 5, 6, of the Early period southern coast. Trait 15 looks like an anticipation of Middle-Late lea forms, but it is only an approximation. Notable is 16, the absence of Tiahuanaco influences. It may therefore be concluded that the culture here called Middle is middle in time, viz., post-Early Nazca, and pre-Late lea, Chincha, Lima, Chancay. It roots partly in ter- minal Early Nazca culture; but, in distinction from this, is remarkably free from the Tia- 253 254 CANETK VAl.LKY huanacoid influences which in most coast valleys are the specific criterion of prehistoric Peruvian Middle time. There is a possibility that an Early Cafiete culture underlies the Middle Cafiete one in parts of the Cerro del Oro. The slender evidence however consists only of some unassociated Early Nazca type sherds. Extensive and careful excavations would have to be performed before it could be decided whether such an earlier culture once flourished on the spot, or whether its fragments represented terminal Nazca (Y) imports into the Middle Cafiete culture. APPENDIX I MIDDLE CANETE TOMB DESCRIPTIONS KROEBER EXCAVATIONS SITE A1 Tomb 1. — Trench-like, E to W, between terraces; floor 120 cm. below surface. Four bodies in row on up-hill (S) side, facing N; pottery along their feet along N wall. Clothing rotted to powdery scraps. Numerous fragile calabashes, deep, not bowl-shaped. Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 1. Tomb 2. — Adjoining 1 on E; 70 cm. square, 100 floor to surface. N side formed by a large rock. Cylindrical stone 80 cm. long laid across N side of top. Clothing partly preserved, frozen stiff with salt. Mummy lacked cranium ; mandible present. Tomb 3. — Adjoining 2 on S, i.e. out of line. Craniumless mummy under vault-roofed niche of tomb; walls 100 cm. high. No pottery or objects. Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 2. Tomb 3a. — Not well defined; adjoining 3 on S. Child's body, head in cloth wrapping knotted to a peak. No objects except a dog mandible. Tomb 4. — 100 or more meters N of l-3a group, slightly higher. Adobe-walled trench-chamber. Three children's bodies, humped, heads literally between knees. All heads bandaged two ways. Heads of first and second bodies only 30 and 50 cm. below surface; third slightly deeper in cave-like chamber to W of others. No pottery or objects, except dog skull with second body. Tovib 5. — Five meters SW of 4. Four bodies; adult, broken, contracted position, but nearly flat; child, in chamber or recess; two adults, in square chamber of adobe, contracted position, but head not between knees, and either fallen over or laid side by side. Specimen 169792 with first body, 169639-40 with second, 169643-46 with third and fourth. Tomb 6. — Two hundred meters S of l-3a, at lower level of hill surface. Tomb 6a. — "Under" 6, 150 cm. below surface. Roofed with adobes of double dimensions. Child's body. Tomb 6b. — Adjoining to NW, 250 cm. deep; 220 cm. to top of body. Similar cave-chamber, similarly roofed. Two skulls of adults, one headless skeleton, apparently of adult, but small-boned. Tomb 6c— Depth 210 cm. Whole body. Tomb 7. — Adjoining 5 on S; 90 cm. deep. Body, with bowl laid on head; also fragments of baby's skull. Tomb 8. — Adjoining 7 on S; about same depth. Two seated bodies, one on a fragmentary wicker basket; both headless, but one with lower jaw. Tomb 9.— Near 5, 7, 8, to S. Tomb 10. — Two meters E of "4" (sic; for 9?). Body without cranium, but with mandible. Tomb 11. — In line with 9. Two bodies; no artifacts. Tomb 12. — Fifty meters NW of 6 in direction of 4, 5, 7, 11. In adobe-walled chamber 190 cm. below surface, 50 x 60 cm., 60 cm. high, a child's body. Chamber roofed with three sticks; across these, canes; on canes, soft earth; child's body roped as usual, clothing rotted; seated on a blackish cloth. One calabash, no pottery. In another adobe chamber 80 cm. from last, and roofed with inclined stones, were two roped bodies, one lacking most of its limbs, the other its head and arms; with them was at least one calabash but no pottery. Tomb 13. — A few meters W of 9-11; chamber as usual; in rocky soil. Tomb 14. — Adjoining 13 on N. Similar. Tomb 15. — SE and downhill c. 40 meters from 4, 9, 13 group. Tomb 16. — Near 15. Outside 110 cm. square, inside 80 cm.; of adobes, except front of stones and adobes; 80 cm. high interior; 110 cm. soil above to surface. Wooden beam across top; from this to front 1 These A tombs lay in 5 groups: l-3a; 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, c. 100 meters N; 15, 16, 40 meters SE from 4-5; 6-6c, 200 meters S of l-3a; 12, 50 meters NW of 6-6c toward 4-5. 255 256 ca5Sete valley wall, roof of stones. Six bodies were seated in this one chamber, as shown in Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 3, none of them with head between knees. Objects 169692-713. SITE F Tomb 20. — Ten meters uphill from a sacked Late cemetery. Tomb 21. — Adjoining 20 on W; 100 cm. deep. Half-arched, sloping roof of adobes. Tomb 25. — Near 20-21. Contained only body and gourd vessels. Tomb 26. — Twenty meters N of 20-21, on same level of hillside; 110 cm. deep; against a wall. Late burials downhill from this. Tomb 27. — Uphill (E) from 26, behind another wall; 110 cm. deep. Tomb 28. — E of 27, 130 cm. deep. Vertically above this grave was a Late or Chincha-type deposit or slide of tumbled grave material, from 70 or 80 to 100 cm. thick, including three black 2-handled jars, a globular spindle whorl, and five undeformed skulls (169796-804). Plate LXXVIII, Fig. 4. Four pottery vessels were with the body of Tomb 28. Behind it (uphill) was a wall. Tomb SO. — Six meters N of 26, on same level; 150 cm. deep; on E (uphill) side of a wall. Dimensions 75 x 75 x 75 cm.; 6 courses of adobes; floor "torta," caked mud; roof flat, of unsupported adobes. This roof had kept even dust from seeping into the tomb. A footed bowl was laid inverted on the mummy's head. Besides specimens 169843^9, the tomb contained a series of calabashes of shapes resembling pottery vessels. APPENDIX II MIDDLE CANETE TOMB CONTENTS KROEBER AND HURTADO EXCAVATIONS TOMB A-l 169609-12 Four bodies 169613 Brownish pot; lip, no handle 169614 White jar; groove-tail fish design 169615 Wide plate, half red, half gray; pieces only 169616 Similar fragments 169617 Wide plate, arc and cross design; broken but complete 169618 Wide plate, striped ; fragments, incomplete 169619 Wide plate, arcs; fragments, incomplete 169620 Comb fragments 169621 Seven spindles (three with cylindrical whorls, incised and painted) 169622 Dog's head, incomplete 169623 Dog's head TOMB A-2 169625 Body and mandible, without skull 169626 Fragment of coarse basketry and comb TOMB A-3 169633 Body and mandible, without skull TOMB A-3a 169634 Child's body, head in cloth wrapping 169635 Dog's mandible TOMB A-4 169636 Child's body 169637 Dog's skull TOMB A-5 169638, 41, 42 Three of four bodies in tomb 169639 Flat bowl, painted 169640 Small jar 169643 Four spindles with round and oval whorls, paint-incised 169644 About thirteen bone and two spine needles 169645 Painted plate; broken, not complete 169646 Two pieces of painted cup-bowl, Early Nazca shape 169792 Pottery head, Nazca type TOMB A-6 169673 Conical sieve jar, broken, but complete TOMB A-6a 169666 Double-spout jar, geometric pattern on white, Nazca style 169667 Disk plate, center hole, painted 169668 Jar, one handle, painted white 169669 Jarlet TOMB A-6b 169670-72 Two skulls with jaws, body of small adult (with one of skulls?) 257 258 CAfiKTE VALLEY TOMB A-6c 169674 Body 169675 Double-spout jar (spout lost) ; one globe on other 169676 Plate, red and black striped TOMB A-7 169647 Body 169648 Low flat bowl, broken but complete 169649 Jar, painted, side opening 169650 Two spindles (one with globular incised whorl) 169651 Pottery fragment; imitation of olecranon of humerus(?) 169652 Four black ears of corn TOMB A-8 169653 Two headless bodies, one mandible 169654 Bird jar, Nazca Y style 169655 Fragment of flat wicker basket TOMB A-9 169657 Body 169658 Large jar, black and white arcs on red 169659 Plate; solid black arcs on red; whole 169660 Brown and yellow cloth, fragment TOMB A-10 169661 Body and mandible, without skull 169662 Black and red conical sieve, complete 169663 One ear black corn TOMB A-ll 169664-65 Two bodies TOMB A-12 169678 Blackish cloth, brown and yellow edge 169679 Half dog mandible 169691 Six sherds TOMB A-12a 169677 Child's body TOMB A-12b-c 169680-81 Skull and body 169682 Flat wicker basket 169683 Ear of black corn . TOMB A-13 169684 Body 169685 Jar; three papaya fruits; double-spout broken off 169686 Three spindles (two with incised globular whorls) 169687 Pottery figurine, breasts, black and white, incomplete TOMB A-14 169688 Body 169689 Calabash filled with cotton and plugged with adobe disk 169690 Four spindles (three with cylindrical incised whorls) TOMB A-15 169714 Body 169715 Bunch of braids (for feathers?) MIDDLE CANETE TOMB CONTENTS 259 TOMB A-16 169692 Twilled basket, string, wooden peg 169693 Miniature reed mat or cradle, three calabash fragments strung on it like doll 169694 Four canes 169695 Outside cloth wrapping of body, brownish, one hole 169696, 99, 707, 09, 11, 13. .Six bodies 169697 o, square cloth with four strings; b, copper bell; c, half dozen beads including one minute turquois ; with body 6 169698 Two small twilled baskets containing four small sewn pouches; cane, stopped at both ends; seven small calabashes; with body 6 169700 Fiber sling from head 169701 Head-band of twisted skin(?) 169702 Three pouches (two patterned) 169703 a, square cloth with 4 strings; b, small sewn pouch; c, cross with red "lace"; d, bit of red wool ; e, cane; /, cut shell ; g, red corn ear; with body 1 169704 Cloth, head wrapping of body 1 169705 Cloth, outer wrapping of body 1 169706 Square cloth with strings at four corners; with body 2 169708 a, head-band and veil, red and black; b, square cloth with corner strings; c, sample of outer cloth wrapping; d, two cut shell beads; with body 3 169710 a, small twilled basket; b, c, d, three square cloths with corner strings; with body 4 169712 Six ears of maize; with body 6 TOMB D-19 169718 Body 169719 Plate, red ; in pieces, nearly complete TOMB F-20 169729 Body 169730 Bowl with foot, inside black (part of edge lost) 169731 Pieces of plate found lying on mummy's head 169732 Plain jar 169733 Seven spindles (one with cylindrical whorl) 169734 Four bone needles 169735 Pouch TOMB F-21 169738 Body 169739 Six-cornered jar 169740 Larger jar, painted black 169741 Bowl with foot; design, diamonds 169742 Plate; step triangle, white edge on purple-black TOMB F-25 169782 Body TOMB F-26 169783 Body 169784 Wide plate, red-white-black stripes and arcs; from head of mummy; in three pieces 169785 Four spindles (two whorls globular, one grooved, one near-cylindrical) TOMB F-27 169786 Body TOMB F-28 169787 Body 169788 Bowl with foot, inside purple; broken 260 CARETK VALLEY 169789 Jar, painted with bird figure, no handles 169790 Jar, smaller, purple top, no handles 169791 Large bowl, no neck TOMB F-30 169843 Small red bowl with foot; from mummy's head 169844 Large jar, painted, yellow Nazca head on mouth 169845 Knob-headed wooden implement 169846 Bone awl and piece of slate in a calabash 169847 Yellow feather ornament on broken stick; in wrappings above head 169848 Preserved portions of cloth forming a sort of false head or peaked crown 169849 Fragments of rope from mummy lashings 169850 Body TOMB NE-1 170241 Large red jar, three RWB fishes 170242 Pair of low bowls, red, inside purplish 170243 Jar, bridge-and-spout, modeled woman, baby on head, RWB 170244 Low jar, RWB 170245 o, fragment of oblong basket; b, spindle with cylindrical whorl, red, yellow, white, blue TOMB NE-4 170246 Body 170247 Cloth wrappings, very rotten; brown, originally white(?) 170248 Open flaring bowl, RWB circles for ornament TOMB NE-5 170249 Body 170250 Double-spout jar, RWB zigzag band 170251 Round jar, one side white, other with pattern of square spiral in RWB and purple 170252 Low bowl, white segments and dots on purple 170253 Large sherd, perforated in middle 170254 Sticks, spindles, cloth TOMB NE-16 170255 Child's mummy lashed on mat, flat. Head crumbled TOMB NE-18 170256 Large red jar, RWB, one large double spiral 170257 Low jar or bowl, zigzag band 170258 Tiny jar, black and white 170259 Tiny jar, apparently unfired 170260a Two holed plates, flat, plain, unfired (one left in Lima) 170260b Pair of wooden pegs or tops(?) 170261 Fragments of plain white cloth 170262 Fragments of red-yellow-blue cloth 170263 Bundle of split cane 170264 Corn ears 170265 Three calabashes, sausage-shaped (two left in Lima) TOMB NE-20 170266 Large jar, red-white-purple, four double spirals 170267 Rough reed rope on a cane, plug for 170266 170268 Conical sieve, fine, red and black 170269 c. twenty-five clay tubes (thirteen left in Lima) MIDDLE CANETE TOMB CONTENTS 261 170270 Large sherd with hole 170271 Mass of string or net, pebble, and peg like 170260 170272 Cane with remnants of white cloth "flag" ; planted behind body 170273 Stick of lucma wood, broken; also planted behind body 170274 Five sticks and canes 170275 Four shorter canes 170276 Two bundles of short canes 170277 Three bundles of split canes 170278 Fragment of circular wicker basket 170279 Calabash, yellow paint inside TOMB NNE-10 170280 Body of child 170281 Low bowl, RWB, diagonal pattern 170282 Flaring bowl, small, RWB 170283 Jar, small belly, high neck, BW, crude 170284 Small jar, bird's head projection, RWB, crude 170285 Broken jar, wide neck, RWB, crude 170286 Jar neck TOMB S-6 (Below S-3, which probably Late) 170298 Good bowl on foot, outside red, inside purple APPENDIX III DIMENSIONS OF MIDDLE CANETE TOMBS, WALLS, AND BRICKS Measured by A. Hurtado in Centimeters A— MIDDLE CAftETE TOMB SIZES Tomb number SSE 1 1 2 3*-5 6* NNE NE 7 8 9 10* 11 12 13 1* 2-3 4* 5* 6 r- j 8 9 10 11 ri2 13 NE-(A) i o 6 a .a D ■s E s T3 "a> S « H E- O W H W < o w > X X ►4 o > gj o a o < w H Z 05 O I— i > < o H O -J! < a & o H-* .a a (3 3 s T3 o w w