This Element presents a case study of the authors' partnership with the Pintada community in their excavation of a pre-Columbian site known as 'Huaca Pintada', a pyramidal mound located in the Lambayeque region on the north coast of Peru. The site, which gained recognition after the fortuitous discovery by looters in 1916 of an exceptional polychrome mural, was somehow 'forgotten' by the scientific community after irreversible damage. However, this was not the case for the local inhabitants, families like the Inonan or the Chaponan descendants of ancient muchic traditions, who founded a village named after their illustrious elder. The authors will describe how local actors like shamans or workers were indispensable in finding solutions that led not only to the rediscovery of the treasures of the Huaca Pintada but also to the reconnection of the community with its past.
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978-1-009-58371-8 (9781009583718)
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University of Fribourg, Switzerland
University of Virginia, VA
1. Introduction. Navigating Tensions: Integrating Indigenous Knowledge and Ownership in Peruvian Archaeology; 2. The Huaca Pintada Archaeological Project; 3. Archaeology, Conservation, and Preservation of Huaca Pintada; 4. Archaeological Sites are Indigenous Anchors in Landscape that Enable the Materialization of Social Memory; 5. Conclusions; Bibliography.