orchid mae letter #20 - Rediscovering Lost Cities

Machu Picchu

On July 24, 1911, a Yale history lecturer named Hiram Bingham III climbed a mountain ridge in Peru and came upon one of the most remarkable ancient sites ever seen by a Western explorer: Machu Picchu. Bingham was not an archaeologist, and he hadn't even set out to find the site. His original goal was to locate Vitcos and Vilcabamba, the last known capitals of the Inca Empire.

Machu Picchu, Peru 2007. Creative Commons

His arrival there was no accident. Before setting out, he gathered testimony from local people, consulted Spanish colonial records, and followed up on a tip from a fellow researcher that ruins existed somewhere above the Urubamba River valley. He refused to turn down any lead, and it paid off. Of course, for the Peruvian locals who guided him up that ridge, Machu Picchu was never lost to begin with. Bingham's "discovery" was really a reintroduction of the site to the outside world.

 

Despite finding it, Bingham later made the mistake of claiming Machu Picchu was Vilcabamba, the legendary lost city of the Incas. Historians now believe that title belongs to Espiritu Pampa, another site Bingham visited that same summer. Machu Picchu was built during the height of Incan power, not during the empire's final retreat from Spanish forces.

 

The site's worldwide fame owes a great deal to the National Geographic Society, which funded Bingham's return expeditions and dedicated an entire magazine issue to Machu Picchu in 1913. The photographs he brought back introduced the ancient city to the world, and visitors have been making the journey there ever since.

Other Lost Cities of the Amazon

For centuries, the Amazon rainforest has been the subject of stories about hidden cities and lost riches. The most famous of these is El Dorado, a legend born in the 16th century from accounts of the Muisca people of Colombia, whose chief would coat himself in gold dust and make offerings to a sacred lake. As the story spread across Europe, a ritual became a rumor, and a rumor became a city of gold. It was never found, because it never quite existed, but that has done little to stop people from looking.

 

Not all of the Amazon's lost cities are legends, though. In Bolivia's Llanos de Mojos region, scientists using airborne lidar (a technology that fires infrared beams from aircraft to map terrain hidden beneath the forest canopy) have identified the remains of a large urban civilization built by the Casarabe people between roughly 500 and 1400 C.E. The sites include pyramids that once stood over 70 feet tall, raised roads connecting outlying settlements, and large reservoirs suggesting the society struggled with drought at some point. Eleven of the sites found in 2022 were completely unknown before the survey. What happened to the Casarabe is still unclear, but their cities seem to have been abandoned well before Spanish contact.
 

Similar discoveries have been made in Ecuador's Upano Valley, where archaeologists identified 15 settlements across 120 square miles, with flood barriers, drainage canals, and neighborhoods divided by social class. In Brazil, near the headwaters of the Xingu River, surveys located over 20 interconnected settlements spread across thousands of square miles, close to where British explorer Percy Fawcett disappeared in 1925 while searching for a lost civilization he called simply "Z."

Headwaters of the Rio Upano, Ecuador 2013. Creative Commons

What these discoveries have in common is the same basic finding: the Amazon was never the empty wilderness that early European explorers assumed. It was home to large, organized societies, and much of that history is still buried under the trees.

Sources: 

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/machu-picchu-hiram-bingham 
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/lost-cities-of-the-amazon-discovered-from-the-air-180980142/ 
https://www.rainforestcruises.com/guides/lost-cities-of-the-amazon
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Machu_Picchu,_Peru.jpg 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:UPANO_-_panoramio.jpg 

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