Ancient temple found under Lake Titicaca

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Divers went as deep as 30m in their exploration

The ruins of an ancient temple have been found by international archaeologists under Lake Titicaca, the world’s highest lake.

lake_titicaca_mapA terrace for crops, a long road and an 800-metre (2,600 feet) long wall was also found under the waters of the lake, sited in the Andes mountains between Bolivia and Peru.

Dating back 1,000 to 1,500 years ago, the ruins are pre-Incan.

They have been attributed to the indigenous Tiwanaku or Tiahuanaco people, said Lorenzo Epis, the Italian scientist leading the Atahuallpa 2000 scientific expedition.

The holy temple measures 200m by 50m (660ft by 160ft) almost twice the size of an average football pitch.

More than 200 dives were made into the lake, to depths of as much as 30m (100ft), to record the ruins on film.

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The Incas, who built Machu Picchu, believed they originated from the lake

The explorers found the temple after following a submerged road, in an area of the lake not far from Copacabana town.

The complete findings of the 30-member team, backed by the scientific group Akakor Geographical Exploring, are to be published in November.

The team also hopes to eventually raise the archaeological remains to the surface.

Legends of lost city

The lake has long drawn fascination with various legends around it, including one of an underwater city called Wanaku and another of Inca gold lost by the Spanish.

The temple exists, but there is no submerged city

Lorenzo Epis

The Incas also regarded the lake as the birthplace of their civilisation, and in their myth, the Children of The Sun emerged out of the waters.

Stories of the lost treasure were enough to draw the famous French oceanographer Jacques Cousteau to explore the lake. However, he discovered only ancient pottery.

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Akakor diver Lorenzo Epis in the lake

National Geographic also launched an expedition in 1988.

The Tiahuanaco culture lived on the shores of the lake before becoming part of the Incan empire, based in Cusco, Peru.

The Bolivian Government has said it will provide financial and technical support to preserve the ruins.

“This means our civilisations have left more footprints than we had thought,” said Antonio Eguino, Bolivia’s vice-minister of culture.

Source: BBC

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2 Responses to Ancient temple found under Lake Titicaca

  1. Forrest Loftis

    I’m married to a Peruvian and my hobby is ancient cultures. Tha dive study done in 2000 is the worst publicity possible for advancing the idea of very ancient cultures. After all the hoopla and promises of published photos/reports on the “subermerged ruins”, we still have no followup. All involved in this scam should be in a Peruvian prison or at least denounced by sites such as yours. You are implicated by your silence.

  2. mike

    I agree with Forrest. They dove in 2000, said they would have results for public by November of the same year…. 10 years later and all I can find is the same old headline “Temple found beneath lake titicaca”…

    Pathetic. If this is a real discovery, then why isn’t this a huge undertaking of international teams?

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