Mysterious Inca Festival on the Andes

The American archaeologist John Reinhard’s career is to search for the Inca corpses of the 20,000-foot-high mountains, where few people can climb.


Every time I walk a few steps I have to put my hand on my lap, leaning forward and gasping. On the 19,500-foot mountain, there is a 40-pound object on the back. All I can do is move forward mechanically. Stop for three steps, take a four-step break, and sit and rest for 10 minutes every hour. The temperature on the mountain was cold to 15 degrees Fahrenheit, wearing a wool coat, a wool cap, thick gloves, and windproof trousers to the feet. It was dressed so thick that I still felt a bitter cold. Black clouds revolved around the top of the mountain, the north wind blew my face, and the hail of the Andes was like a sharp bullet.


In the fog, I tried to imagine an Inca child, maybe a young girl, wearing a pair of sandals and climbing this big mountain five hundred years ago. She knew what was waiting for her fate. Once she reached the top, she would be killed and buried in a crypt under the stone platform. This is her last day in the world: she is a victim chosen from her tribe. In 20,000 feet of thin air, there are plenty of dormant volcanoes, and God will have her dead here.



Such a festival took place on this mountain 500 years ago. It was not a good image in my hypoxic mind, but the American archaeologist John Reinhard had spent 20 years climbing the Andes. More than 17,000 feet of hundreds of mountains, looking for Inca sites. His first reward was the discovery in 1986 of silver statues and other funerals 500 years ago. It was found on the 19,655-foot high Cerro Cópoa in Chile.


In 1989 he excavated a rotted sacrificial living man on Peru's 1,600-foot-tall Pichu Peak. Later in 1995, the entire world knew Reinhard's most special discovery and found a dead body of a 14-year-old girl on the 20,700-foot-high Nebradu Peak in northern Peru. In addition to this corpse, he also discovered a large number of items ranging from wooden utensils to gold and silver figurines.


The Peruvians call the five hundred-year-old corpse Junita, Spain called her name Zhuan, and the international press called her ice-girl. Ice Girl became the most popular corpse found, thanks to her excellent preservation of the environment and the perfect work of discovering her. After years of field work in the slopes, John Reinhard became probably the most famous archeologist in the world.


When I was struggling to climb the 20112 foot high Sierra Nevada (it is in the northwest of Argentina), Reinhard was there, still searching for the greatest cultural footprints before Columbus in South America. It was February. On the sixth day of our trip, the 55-year-old scientist landed behind the Peruvian guide and his 30-year-old graduate student. Before leaving, he said to me that he was tired these days, but there was nothing to worry about. "When I reach the top of the mountain, I will be the best in the team."



The peak is 600 feet above us. Reinhard plans to excavate the Inca ruins there. It was he who found there in 1981. The poachers had already arrived there in the seventies and had taken the head of a dead body. In the cobblestone structure, Reinhard found a terrible phenomenon: a cranium against the wall and a human ear. Now in 1999, Reinhard hopes to find the rest of the body, and possibly the remains of other victims.


I met Reinhard for the first time in November last year. It was at the Beverly Hills Film Festival. We immediately saw it and talked about climbing and archeology. “The Andean peaks are the center of the ceremony, and there are Inca ruins,” he told me. “If poachers first got there, they wouldn’t exist anymore.” He mentioned several explorations conducted by the captain that made me excited. Yes, the archeologist invited me to see it.


Four months later, I set out to catch Reinhard's expedition. I took a small plane from Chubujin through Livia to San Miguel, then took an expensive taxi and walked 150 miles north to Salta. Where I got off-road vehicle west to the foot of the mountain.



The Andes in the northwest of Argentina are more beautiful than desolate. There are no big cliffs and sharp steep ridges to block the eyes. In fact, more is the peak formed by the volcanic cone, above is a small glaciers, floating a special cloud.

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