Investigating a child sacrifice event from the Inca heartland

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Investigating a child sacrifice event from the Inca heartland
Abstract
Human sacrifice in the Inca Empire at times took the form of the capacocha, a sacrificial rite involving the most beautiful children in the empire. In this study, we investigate a possible capacocha at the pre-Columbian site of Choquepukio in the Cuzco Valley of Peru. During excavations at Choquepukio in 2004, seven children (aged 3-12 years) were discovered buried together; accompanying them was an elaborate assemblage of high status artifacts similar to those from other recent archaeological finds that are believed to be capacocha sacrifices. Since colonial documents indicate that capacocha children were selected from diverse regions of the empire, we initiated a radiogenic strontium isotope analysis to determine the origins of the children found at Choquepukio. Our analysis showed that, indeed, two children in the assemblage had non-local origins. When considered together, the osteological, archaeological, and isotopic evidence suggest that a capacocha event occurred at Choquepukio, representing the only lower-elevation capacocha to have been found in the Cuzco region. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Publication
Journal of Archaeological Science
Date
2011-02
Volume
38
Issue
2
Pages
323-333
Journal Abbr
J. Archaeol. Sci.
Citation Key
ISI:000285859500011
ISSN
0305-4403
Language
English
Extra
41 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Citation Key: ISI:000285859500011 Citation Key Alias: lens.org/092-741-186-183-170 tex.orcid-numbers: [object Object] tex.researcherid-numbers: [object Object] tex.unique-id: [object Object]
Citation
Andrushko, V. A., Buzon, M. R., Gibaja, A. M., McEwan, G. F., Simonetti, A., & Creaser, R. A. (2011). Investigating a child sacrifice event from the Inca heartland. Journal of Archaeological Science, 38(2), 323–333. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2010.09.009