Sacred Landscape of the Incas in Central Chile: Radial Ceque System Encoded in the Archeological Site Ruinas de Chada
Nicolas Palacios-Prado, Fabiola Corominas

TL;DR
This study uncovers a sophisticated radial ceque system at the Ruinas de Chada site, linking peaks and shrines over 200 km, indicating advanced ancient geodetic knowledge and sacred landscape organization in Inca culture.
Contribution
It reveals a previously unrecognized radial alignment system and sacred geometric pattern encoded in the site, suggesting complex Inca geospatial and religious practices.
Findings
Alignment system extends over 200 km
Sacred geometric pattern encodes the Chakana symbol
Chada valley may have been the sacred center of Collasuyu
Abstract
Mounts and hills played a predominant role in all pre-Hispanic Andean cultures, especially for the Inca culture. Through the use of georeferenced orthophotography, we found that the Inca site, Ruinas de Chada, represents the origin of a radial ceque system with alignments connecting, at one end high peaks of mounts at the Andes, and on the other end the summit of small hills in which important shrines were built. These alignments extend over two hundred kilometers, thus we propose that the information codified on this shrine was based on an ancient geodetic science. A sacred geometric relationship is encrypted in the pattern formed by the position of all shrines with high accuracy, in which the Andean Chakana symbol is represented. These findings suggest that the valley of Chada could have been the sacred center of Collasuyu.
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Taxonomy
TopicsLatin American history and culture · Environmental and Cultural Studies in Latin America and Beyond · Archaeology and ancient environmental studies
