Puma
Punku is a large temple complex located in Tiwanaku, Bolivia. In Aymara, the
name Puma Punku means, "The Door of the Cougar." It is situated near
the south eastern shore of Lake Titicaca, and sits on a plateau in the Andes at
roughly 12,600 feet elevation.
The
Temple at Puma Punku within the overall Tiwanaku area around Lake Titicaca
included huge megalithic stones like those at Sacsayhuaman above Cuzco
Puma
Punku's construction is generally argued to have taken place beginning around
200 BC. The temple itself stood at least 56 feet tall and took up an area of
164 square feet while the overall site and the surrounding constructions,
namely the pyramid, which the ruins sit on, extend over a quarter of a mile in
length.
At its
peak, Puma Punku is thought to have been unimaginably wondrous, adorned with
polished metal plaques, brightly colored ceramic and fabric ornamentation, and
trafficked by costumed citizens, elaborately dressed priests and elites decked
in exotic jewelry.
Puma
Punku was widely known for its opulence in personal adornment as well as
extravagant decorations
It is
interesting to note the time frame. 200 B.C., close to the time Mosiah I was
told to flee out of the city with those who would go with him (Omni 1:12),
which he did, and came down into the area of Zarahemla. The Nephites, at the
peak of opulence, are repeatedly described as “they began to be
exceedingly rich, having abundance of all things whatsoever they stood in need
-- an abundance of flocks and herds, and fatlings of every kind, and also
abundance of grain, and of gold, and of silver, and of precious things, and
abundance of silk and fine-twined linen, and all manner of good homely cloth”
(Alma 1:2), and “the people of the church began to wax proud, because of their
exceeding riches, and their fine silks, and their fine-twined linen, and
because of their many flocks and herds, and their gold and their silver, and
all manner of precious things, which they had obtained by their industry; and
in all these things were they lifted up in the pride of their eyes, for they
began to wear very costly apparel” (Alma 4:6).
No doubt in the City of Nephi, they had
reached the level “and their hearts were set upon riches, or upon gold and
silver, and precious stones; yet they sought to obtain these things by
murdering and plundering, that they might not labor for them with their own
hands” (Alma 17:14) as well as “Behold their costly apparel, and their
ringlets, and their bracelets, and their ornaments of gold, and all their
precious things which they are ornamented with; and behold, their hearts are
set upon them, and yet they cry unto thee and say -- We thank thee, O God, for
we are a chosen people unto thee, while others shall perish" (Alma 31:28).
Gold, silver and precious metals adorned the people and entire city of
Puma Punku
Puma Punku, of course, around Lake
Titicaca would have been in the midst of the area of the City of Nephi. It is
likely what archaeologists have found is the remnants of the area when Mosiah
left and the Nephites had reached the peak of their unrighteousness and though
we know nothing of what happened to those left in the Land of Nephi, it seems
apparent that the Lamanites were not sparing of them when they invaded the
area.
Understanding
of this complex is limited due to its age, the lack of a written record, and
the current deteriorated state of the structures due to looting, stone mining
for building stone and railroad ballast and natural weathering. The
technological innovation and the beautiful stonework that went into the
creation of Puma Punku have drawn comparisons to the Egyptian pyramids,
Stonehenge and Easter Island
Determining
the age of these ruins has been a focus of researchers since the site's
discovery. Currently archaeologists date the beginning of the Tiwanaku culture
to some time around 1500 BC, and the construction of the Puma Punku complex to
around 200 B.C. However, in the early 1900s, Bolivian engineer Arthur
Posnansky, based on astronomical alignments, concluded that Tiwanaku was
constructed much earlier, possibly even older than the Tiwanaku. A similar conclusion
was given about thirty years later by German astronomers from the University of
Bonn; Rolf Muller, Hanns Lundendorff, Friederich Becker, and Arnold
Kohlshutter, though subsequent archaeological research has found no physical
evidence, including prehistoric tools and dated midden deposits, for any
occupation of the Tiwanaku site as old as argued by Posnansky and the German
astronomers either at the Tiwanaku Site, near it, or in direct association with
the Puma Punku complex, despite decades of intensive excavation and research.
What is
known is the opulence of the ancient inhabitants of Puma Punku, and that the architectural
achievements seen at Puma Punku are striking in light of the presumed level of
technological capability available during its construction. Due to the
monumental proportions of the stones, the method by which they were transported
to Puma Punku has been a topic of interest since the temple's discovery. The
current evidence is that the stones were transported up a steep incline from a
quarry near Lake Titicaca roughly 20 miles away. Some of the blocks are said to
weigh in the range of 100-130 tons. In fact, one notable block has been
measured at 36 feet long, 16 feet wide and 6 feet thick. Several theories have
been proposed as to how this labor force transported the stones although these
theories remain speculative.
In
assembling the walls of Puma Punku, each stone was finely cut to interlock with
the surrounding stones and the blocks fit together like a puzzle, forming
load-bearing joints without the use of mortar. One common engineering technique
involves cutting the top of the lower stone at a certain angle, and placing
another stone on top of it which was cut at the same angle. The precision with
which these angles have been utilized to create flush joints is indicative of a
highly sophisticated knowledge of stone-cutting and a thorough understanding of
descriptive geometry.
Many of the joints are so precise that
not even a razor blade will fit between the stones, and are so uniformly cut that
they could be interchanged for one another while maintaining a level surface
and even joints, technology far
in advance of the Tiwanaku's Incan successors more than a thousand years later
Tiwanaku engineers
were also adept at developing a civic infrastructure at this complex,
constructing functional irrigation systems, hydraulic mechanisms, and
waterproof sewage lines. To sustain the weight of these massive structures, their
architects meticulously created foundations, often fitting stones directly to
bedrock or digging precise trenches and carefully filling them with layered
sedimentary stones to support large stone blocks. In addition, the engineers
developed a system of architectural cramps, composed of a unique
copper-arsenic-nickel bronze alloy. These I-shaped cramps were also used on a
section of canal found at the base of the Akapana pyramid at the Tiwanaku
complex.
These cramps were used to hold the blocks
comprising the walls and bottom of stone-line canals that drain sunken courts,
and were used to hold together the massive slabs that formed Puma Punku's four
large platforms
In the south canal of Puma Punku, the I-shaped cramps were cast in place, in sharp contrast to
the cramps used at the Akapana canal, which were fashioned by the cold
hammering of copper-arsenic-nickel bronze ingots—an alloy also found in metal
artifacts within the region between Tiwanaku and San Pedro de Atacama, Chile,
just under 500 miles to the south of Lake Titicaca.
lake tittikaka (hee hee)
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