Saturday, April 23, 2016

4,500 year-old mummy found in Peru

Discovery of 4,500-year-old female mummy sheds light on ancient Peru

The Guardian 

Archaeologists say the mummified remains, found near one of the oldest cities in the Americas, probably belong to a noblewoman aged 40 to 50



Archaeologists in Peru have discovered the 4,500-year-old mummy of a woman buried near one of the most ancient cities of the Americas.
Dr Ruth Shady Solís said the mummy was probably a noblewoman who died aged 40 to 50 years old and was buried in the coastal ruins of Aspero, about 14 miles away from Caral, a city with some of the most ancient pyramids in the Americas. Both sites stand about three hours north of the modern capital of Lima.



The mummy was buried with carved objects of monkeys and birds, which Shady Solís said suggested possible trade between the coastal town and Caral, a larger inland city. Shady Solís deduced the woman’s social status from the value and diverse origins of the objects around her: seashells, carved desert birds and designs of jungle monkeys.
Shady Solís’s team has dated the mummy to about 2,500BC, around the same time that people of the region began building pyramids, but has not offered a theory as to the woman’s death.
“In the settlements of the Caral civilization,” she said, “sacrifice of human beings was not regular. They were very rare.”
She also suggested to the Andina news agency that the objects revealed “gender equality, a kind that let both women and men hold leadership roles and achieve a high social status”.
“The place in which she was buried and the form of interment show the high social status that this person achieved about 4,500 years ago.”
The woman was found with a necklace of seashells, a Spondylus pendant, and four “tupus”, or bone broaches carved with designs of birds and monkeys.
Shady Solís also argued that music was an important part of life in these ancient cities, citing the recent discovery of four bone flutes found in the nearby excavation of Supe Puerto, to the north, and 32 flutes in Caral. Similarities between the instruments and their apparent origins from around Peru, Shady Solís argued, suggest trade in items and culture between cities of the Andes.
Although ancient Americans raised pyramids and cities around the same time that the Egyptians built the monuments of Giza, far less is known about the people of Norte Chico, as the ancient societies of arid northern Peru have become known, than their African counterparts.
It is not a question of scale: Caral has six “monumental platforms mounds” (better known as pyramids), three sunken circular courts and large, hive-like structures thought to be homes for upper, middle and low-class people. All suggest a complex society that could be organized to create huge city projects.
But archaeologists disagree about the origins and nature of this part of ancient America. Shady Solís posits that Caral and inland cities grew out of fishing communities like Aspero, while archaeologists such as Jonathan Haas, a curator emeritus at the Field Museum in Chicago, argue that the settlements came from valleys. Haas also said evidence does not support the idea that Caral stood at the center of an ancient American empire.
Haas declined to comment on unpublished findings, but noted that there are “equally large and monumental sites” in nearby valleys, and that there is no empirical evidence so far that binds some 30 ancient settlements to any central power.
Instead, he argued that the cities were part of a decentralized community that shared its culture, and which – like the Egyptians a world away – relied on canals and irrigation to grow corn and other foods. The people of Norte Chico “borrowed” this technology of agriculture, he said, but “were definitely the inventors” of their own kinds of governance, “ceremonial architecture and monumental constructions”.

Monday, April 18, 2016

Yellow Water, Dirty Air, Power Outages: Venezuela Hits a New Low


By  Noris Soto and Fabiolo Zerpa
On Bloomberg News

To read the entire article go to Bloomberg News

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-18/yellow-water-dirty-air-power-outages-venezuela-hits-a-new-low

The tap in her apartment yields water only every two weeks. It comes out yellow. Her 8-month-old granddaughter is ill. And as Yajaira Espinoza, a 55-year-old hairdresser, made her way down the halls of Caracas university hospital on Friday, Zika cases evident in the rooms around her, a dense ash-filled smog enveloped the city.
"I am so sorry for my daughter, because I know she suffers silently," she said. "This situation is hard."
It has been an exceptionally painful year for Venezuelans, suffering from violent crime, chronic shortages, plummeting oil prices on which they depend, declining health and fractured government. Yet this past week it seemed to reach a new low. A kind of resigned misery spread across a city that had once been the envy of Latin America.
A sudden combination of natural disasters joined man-made failures. The smog, called calima, is a meteorological phenomenon that involves ash and dust clouds fairly common for this time of year. Meanwhile a prolonged drought blamed on El Nino and related forest fires has arrived. Levels at the Guri dam in the south, which produces 40 percent of the country’s electricity, fell to a record low of 242.33 meters on Monday.

Water Trucks Robbed

The lack of public order means attempts to alleviate the problems are going poorly. Water trucks dispatched to help reduce suffering from the drought, for example, are being routinely robbed.
“Two or three times a week a water truck we send out is robbed,” said Tatiana Noguera, a water official. “The trucks get stopped by gangs who make the driver change the route and discharge the water in an area they control.”
More than 3,700 cases of respiratory illness related to calima have been reported at state health centers around Caracas since March, said Dr. Miguel Viscuna, an epidemiologist. Medicine -- like toilet paper, chicken and other basic goods -- is increasingly hard to find.
To read more go to Bloomberg News

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

The 2009 Coup in Honduras

Hillary Clinton Justifies Her Support for 2009 Coup in Honduras

“We need to do more of a Colombian Plan for Central America,” said the presidential candidate in an interview.
Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton did not express any regret Monday about her support for the 2009 coup in Honduras, despite the deteriorating human rights situation, recently highlighted with the murder of prominent Indigenous activist Berta Caceres.



Read the original story here

http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Hillary-Clinton-Justifies-her-Support-for-2009-Coup-in-Honduras-20160411-0047.html


See Below:

Berta Caceres criticizes Hillary Clinton's role in the 2009 Honduran Coup