The Japan Times - Roads, farming threaten Ecuador 'lost city' complex

EUR -
AED 4.318561
AFN 74.675681
ALL 95.968869
AMD 434.678331
ANG 2.104761
AOA 1079.49461
ARS 1637.783235
AUD 1.620986
AWG 2.116656
AZN 2.002097
BAM 1.963338
BBD 2.363494
BDT 143.982805
BGN 1.961554
BHD 0.443705
BIF 3492.007139
BMD 1.17592
BND 1.498453
BOB 8.10813
BRL 5.775786
BSD 1.173516
BTN 111.752009
BWP 15.947227
BYN 3.322083
BYR 23048.028115
BZD 2.360081
CAD 1.598146
CDF 2722.25494
CHF 0.916488
CLF 0.027049
CLP 1064.583903
CNY 8.031943
CNH 8.009878
COP 4368.789007
CRC 533.85193
CUC 1.17592
CUP 31.161875
CVE 110.689981
CZK 24.343716
DJF 208.964069
DKK 7.471165
DOP 69.918742
DZD 155.463651
EGP 62.429793
ERN 17.638797
ETB 184.678209
FJD 2.566443
FKP 0.868838
GBP 0.863378
GEL 3.163352
GGP 0.868838
GHS 13.154505
GIP 0.868838
GMD 85.842341
GNF 10298.539998
GTQ 8.955518
GYD 245.502577
HKD 9.214578
HNL 31.192894
HRK 7.538356
HTG 153.57965
HUF 359.665064
IDR 20417.495518
ILS 3.421392
IMP 0.868838
INR 111.224786
IQD 1540.45494
IRR 1547510.459484
ISK 143.179664
JEP 0.868838
JMD 184.658976
JOD 0.833719
JPY 183.530558
KES 151.870483
KGS 102.799497
KHR 4707.072234
KMF 494.484733
KPW 1058.331577
KRW 1703.719585
KWD 0.362054
KYD 0.977863
KZT 545.278167
LAK 25769.156699
LBP 105302.658492
LKR 375.514938
LRD 215.328559
LSL 19.638366
LTL 3.472185
LVL 0.711302
LYD 7.444646
MAD 10.84554
MDL 20.253935
MGA 4891.826663
MKD 61.706123
MMK 2469.086618
MNT 4208.15489
MOP 9.472047
MRU 46.856298
MUR 55.009462
MVR 18.173832
MWK 2034.812416
MXN 20.290555
MYR 4.626121
MZN 75.128545
NAD 19.638366
NGN 1605.012218
NIO 43.167972
NOK 10.91171
NPR 178.80225
NZD 1.971841
OMR 0.452148
PAB 1.173506
PEN 4.113995
PGK 5.102591
PHP 71.866323
PKR 327.014021
PLN 4.23464
PYG 7110.359833
QAR 4.28817
RON 5.241541
RSD 117.374437
RUB 88.404614
RWF 1715.787559
SAR 4.411843
SBD 9.445291
SCR 16.338401
SDG 706.151377
SEK 10.835925
SGD 1.492289
SHP 0.877943
SLE 28.957052
SLL 24658.445775
SOS 670.674975
SRD 44.06995
STD 24339.165724
STN 24.594427
SVC 10.267508
SYP 129.975268
SZL 19.634049
THB 37.953398
TJS 10.971919
TMT 4.121599
TND 3.397815
TOP 2.831333
TRY 53.186535
TTD 7.954608
TWD 36.961529
TZS 3073.187672
UAH 51.569495
UGX 4430.008482
USD 1.17592
UYU 47.241536
UZS 14140.435814
VES 580.309319
VND 30954.912862
VUV 139.37534
WST 3.193717
XAF 658.485174
XAG 0.015318
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.177981
XCG 2.114838
XDR 0.818944
XOF 657.924106
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.57473
ZAR 19.277735
ZMK 10584.690911
ZMW 22.149228
ZWL 378.645696
  • CMSC

    0.0099

    22.88

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    0.0800

    63.18

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    0.1700

    24.1

    +0.71%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.29

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    1.0500

    59.4

    +1.77%

  • GSK

    -0.5200

    50.38

    -1.03%

  • NGG

    0.1400

    87.64

    +0.16%

  • AZN

    -2.2200

    181.24

    -1.22%

  • RELX

    -0.2000

    36.16

    -0.55%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.04

    +0.84%

  • RIO

    1.8700

    100.5

    +1.86%

  • BP

    -0.4400

    46.5

    -0.95%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    16.5

    +0.91%

  • BCC

    -2.2000

    72.13

    -3.05%

  • VOD

    -0.3100

    15.74

    -1.97%

Roads, farming threaten Ecuador 'lost city' complex
Roads, farming threaten Ecuador 'lost city' complex / Photo: Rodrigo BUENDIA - AFP

Roads, farming threaten Ecuador 'lost city' complex

Shielded by the jungle for hundreds of years, the remains of a massive 2,500-year-old network of Ecuadoran cities are being threatened by road and farm encroachment just as its long-held secrets are being revealed, researchers say.

Text size:

Traces of an Amazonian "lost city" were first discovered in 1978, but the full extent of what is now believed to be the largest and oldest such urban expanse were only revealed last year with the help of laser mapping.

The vast site, which covers more than 1,000 square kilometers (385 square miles), lies deep in the Upano valley on the foothills of the Andes mountain range in eastern Ecuador.

It consists of ancient settlements of different sizes, connected by what researchers describe as a complex system of roads.

Archeologists have also identified some 7,400 mounds in various shapes, made by human hands millennia ago.

They stand up to four meters (about 13 feet) tall and five times as wide and are believed to have been the foundations of homes, or communal areas for rituals or festivals.

Some have already been damaged -- wrongly thought by road developers to be natural formations that they could break through.

"There is an urgent need... for a protection plan," said Spanish archeologist Alejandra Sanchez, who has been studying the site for a decade.

Beyond the road construction issue, Sanchez also described the risks posed by erosion, deforestation, and agriculture to the mounds, which she said are "destroyed very easily by rain, wind, plows."

The Upano River, cradle of the Indigenous culture of the same name, is also the victim of voracious mining, both legal and wildcat.

- 'The tip of the iceberg' -

As a first step towards having the site protected, Ecuador's National Institute of Cultural Heritage (INPC) is working on delineating the complex.

The INPC in 2015 started mapping out the area using LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) technology, bouncing laser light off buildings or trees to measure landscapes.

The data was shared with archeologists in 2021.

Last year, Sanchez and Argentine researcher Rita Alvarez presented their analysis of the images in an INPC publication.

Then in January, a French-led team reported their own findings based on the mapping data in the journal Science -- giving global news coverage to the discovery.

The site was first described by priest and archeologist Pedro Porras in the 1980s, according to the private Catholic University's Weilbauer-Porras museum in Quito, which displays finely decorated red-tinted vessels, and a piece of volcanic rock carved in a half-human, half-animal shape.

It also houses maps and black-and-white photographs of Porras pointing to the mounds protruding from the ground.

According to researchers who have studied the city network since the 1980s, the Upano people who built it had the political, economic, and religious organization typical of great civilizations.

Construction on the mounds is thought to have begun between 500 BC and 300-600 AD -- around the time of the Roman empire.

Other urban sites discovered in the Amazon date from between 500-1,500 AD.

And while Ecuador may once have "envied" the archeological riches of other Latin American nations, the Upano site matches them in "quantity, grandeur, history and cultural expression," archaeologist Alden Yepez of the Catholic University told AFP.

He believes discoveries so far are only "the tip of the iceberg" of an even bigger civilization, and that the site may extend up to 2,000 square km around the Upano, Palora and Pastaza rivers, where there are also signs of settlements.

"The idea that the Amazon was an unpopulated space or only inhabited by nomads has been discarded," said INPC director Catalina Tello.

T.Sato--JT