PROJECT OVERVIEW
The Pambamarca Archaeological
Project consists of an international team of researchers investigating ancient,
historic and living landscapes in Pambamarca, Ecuador. The project area of Pambamarca
is located at an elevation of nearly 12,000 feet in the Andean sierra, where
snowcapped peaks dominate the horizon.
As past participants can attest, working on the project is exhilarating
as multiple teams perform a variety of tasks everyday like settlement survey,
site mapping, remote sensing, excavations and laboratory work. This year the project will continue to study
the massive Pre-Columbian fortresses that were built on the peaks of the Pambamarca mountains by Inka and Ecuadorian societies.
The Pambamarca fortresses pose a number
of interesting research problems concerning their origins and use. The late kings of the Inka
Empire were enchanted with Ecuador,
and moved their armies as far north as Quito
with relative ease. Naturally, as they
looked further north beyond Quito,
the Inka armies expected little resistance from the
indigenous societies located in and around what is now known as Pambamarca. As they
moved out from Quito,
however, the Inkas encountered fiercely resistant
societies that were prepared to fight at great lengths for their
independence. In fact, during the next
17 years these Ecuadorians managed to turn back the Inka
until finally their fortresses fell in the early 1500s. The historical documents describe a
subsequent period of Inka rule in which the Inkas constructed and occupied a set of fortifications in
the area.
Today the provinces north of Quito are rife with the remains of prehispanic fortresses, with the greatest concentration
lying in the mountain range of Pambamarca. Empirically, this project seeks
archaeological and historical data relating to the construction and occupation
of the Pambamarca fortresses, as these data will
effectively evaluate a number of hypotheses about the imperial and colonial
realities of the Inka period in Ecuador. Topically, the project is interested in the
nature of resistance and domination along the northern frontier of the Inka Empire, as such knowledge
will contribute greatly to our understanding of imperial and colonial processes
in the ancient world.
The efforts of the Pambamarca
Archaeological Project are valuable on other levels as well. First, in cooperation with professors and
archaeologists from the host country, the project provides Ecuadorian
university students with the opportunity to learn and train with foreign
archaeologists. Second, the results of
this research will be included in the pending application of the Instituto Nacional de Patrimonio Cultural del
Ecuador
to move the Pambamarca Pre-Columbian Fortress Complex
from the Tentative List of UNESCO World Heritage Sites to the Permanent
List. Currently, Ecuador has four
Permanent World Heritage Sites: The Islas Galápagos, the Parque Nacional
Sangay, Ciudad de Quito, and the Centro histórico de Santa Ana de los Ríos de
Cuenca. Pambamarca
would be the first entry from Ecuador
to highlight in particular the country’s important PreColumbian
cultural heritage.