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Bolivian pyramid concealed corpse, jewels for 1,300 years

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From Reuters

Archeologists have uncovered the 1,300-year-old skeleton of a ruler or priest of the ancient Tiwanaku civilization together with precious jewels inside a much-looted pyramid in western Bolivia.

The bones are “in very good condition,” Roger Angel Cossio, the Bolivian archeologist who made the discovery, said Wednesday.

He said the tomb -- containing a diadem and fist-sized carved pendant of solid gold -- survived centuries of looting by Spanish invaders and raiders who depleted Tiwanaku of many precious treasures.

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“After so much looting ... miraculously this has stayed to tell us the history,” Cossio said.

“It’s a complete body.... Next to it are jewels, offerings and a llama,” he said.

The llama may have been a status symbol or a source of food for the journey to the afterlife, archeologists said.

The corpse was found in a niche carved inside the 15-yard-high Akapana pyramid, which was built around 1200 BC and is described as one of the biggest pre-Columbian constructions in South America.

At its peak, the city of Tiwanaku stretched over 1,480 acres and had a population of more than 100,000, according to chief archeologist Javier Escalante, who presented the findings Wednesday at a news conference near the pyramid.

The Tiwanaku civilization spread throughout southwestern Bolivia and parts of neighboring Peru, Argentina and Chile between around 1500 BC and AD 1200.

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