Overview of Huaca de la Luna, Peru

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The Moche were a pre-Incan civilization that dominated the area of the Northern Peru coastline, roughly from 100 to 800 AD. They were known for their distinctive ceramics and artwork which depicted ritualistic human sacrifice, and their unique mortuary treatment of the deceased. Settlements ranged from farmsteads to urban agglomerations. (Millaire 2004) Temple complexes, usually consisting two paired buildings, dotted the coastline with evidence of ritualistic behavior. Huaca de la Luna, paired with Huaca del Sol and thought to be the capital of Moche, is an adobe structure located on the hill of Cerro Blanco on the Moche river valley in Northern Peru (Verano 2000). No evidence of residential activity has been found, but elaborate tombs for the elite and plazas holding evidence of human sacrifice suggest that it was a ceremonial center (Sutter and Cortez 2005).
Huaca de la Luna consists of three mounds connected by courts, completed in at least three series of construction. It is estimated that over 50 million adobe bricks were needed to complete construction of Huaca de la Luna. Differences in brick classes distinguish each distinct phase. The adobe bricks were made by a variety of people, as shown on each maker’s mark inscribed on the stones. This suggests that in the Moche society, tax obligations were fulfilled by sending a work party to build a particular section designated by the ruling authority. (Hastings and Moseley 1975). In Stage 1, a mound about 95 m long by 85 m wide and 20 m high was erected, topped with flagstone pavings, rooms and other walled structures. Stage 2 raised the summit about 3 -4 m, adding new rooms and summit structures, one of which was decorated with a mural. The final stage, Stage 3, filled in the...

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...: Delayed Burials, Grave Reopening, and Secondary Offerings of Human Bones on the Peruvian North Coast
Jean-François Millaire
Latin American Antiquity , Vol. 15, No. 4 (Dec., 2004) , pp. 371-388

PALEOPATHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF SACRIFICIAL VICTIMS AT THE PYRAMID OF THE MOON, MOCHE RIVER VALLEY, NORTHERN PERU
John W. Verano
Chungara: Revista de Antropología Chilena , Vol. 32, No. 1 (Enero - Junio 2000) , pp. 61-70

The Adobes of Huaca del Sol and Huaca de La Luna
C. Mansfield Hastings and M. Edward Moseley
American Antiquity , Vol. 40, No. 2 (Apr., 1975) , pp. 196-203

The Nature of Moche Human Sacrifice: A Bio‐Archaeological Perspective
Richard C. Sutter and Rosa J. Cortez
Current Anthropology , Vol. 46, No. 4 (August/October 2005) , pp. 521-549

Moche Politics, Religion, and Warfare
Jeffrey Quilter
Journal of World Prehistory , Vol. 16, No. 2 (June 2002) , pp. 145-195

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