AutoReviewHub

Odd Relic Reports at Machu Picchu Spotlight Grim Rituals

By Amanda B. -
null
Credit: Gläser/ullstein bild via Getty Images

Treasure hunters have risked life and limb chasing lost cities for centuries, and every so often the payoff justifies the gamble. That was the case with this high-Andean wonder. Since it reentered the modern world, tens of thousands have scrambled up rugged trails to stand among its stonework and jaw-dropping views. But as more evidence of the settlement's darker side comes to light, the future of this mountain shrine feels suddenly fragile.

Built High, Hidden For Centuries

Built High, Hidden For Centuries
Credit: Jeff Overs/BBC News & Current Affairs via Getty Images

The Incas raised Machu Picchu in the 1400s, about 50 miles north of their capital, Cuzco. They stacked terraces into the mountainside to farm and laid out a city that did not quite match other Inca plans. About 200 stone structures cluster in distinct sectors, some clearly ceremonial rather than domestic. The site looks like a retreat for nobles and a pilgrimage stopping point rolled into one.

Conquistadors Missed It, Explorer Found It

Conquistadors Missed It, Explorer Found It
Credit: Jim Dyson/Getty Images

When Francisco Pizarro and his men smashed the Inca Empire in the 1530s, they never reached this mountaintop. Machu Picchu was already empty and forgotten. It stayed that way until Yale historian Hiram Bingham stumbled onto it in 1911, stepping into a city that had not seen people for generations yet remained remarkably intact. His find pushed Machu Picchu into global fame almost overnight.

Dark Rituals and Vanishing Residents

Dark Rituals and Vanishing Residents
Credit: Culture Club/Getty Images

Archaeologists uncovered relics and bones that point to ritual life, including evidence of human sacrifice involving children. The site clearly honored Inti, the sun god, and some neighborhoods were dedicated to religious practice. Still, the bigger mystery was why roughly 750 residents vanished without clear signs of attack or collapse. Most scholars now suspect disease brought by Europeans, like smallpox, wiped out those who once lived there.

Fault Lines, Smart Building, and New Threats

Fault Lines, Smart Building, and New Threats
Credit: Denver Post via Getty Images

Geologist Rualdo Menegat argues Machu Picchu sits right over a network of tectonic faults, with five fractures converging beneath the site. Those cracked rocks made it easier to extract blocks and shape them, while channels in the stone funneled water and helped drainage, which partly explains the site's preservation. Menegat used satellite photos and fieldwork to map the faults and found similar patterns at other Inca settlements. Now, heavy tourism and talk of a nearby airport threaten to undo what centuries of careful building have left standing.

In ashes

In ashes
Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

The Pizarro and his men ruthlessly sacked Cuzco and executed Emperor Atahualpa. Nearly all of Inca civilization lay in ruins, and yet the soldiers never got anywhere near Machu Picchu. The city was already abandoned and forgotten.

Hiram Bingham

Hiram Bingham
Credit: Apic/Getty Images

In fact, the remote settlement may have remained a mystery forever if not for the efforts of Hiram Bingham III. An esteemed Yale historian, Bingham left the classroom behind to chase down a myth he couldn't get out of his mind.

Risking it all

Risking it all
Credit: Movieclips Trailers/YouTube

Maps and records saved from the destruction of the Incas indicated the presence of a city high up in the mountains. Many claimed the site was lost or simply fictional, but Bingham trudged through jungle and mountains to find out.

A stunning feat

A stunning feat
Credit: Keystone/Getty Images

The explorer shocked the world by reaching Machu Picchu in 1911. While it was clear that no humans had lived there for many generations, the lofty community was in remarkably good shape. It was nothing short of a marvel.

Old mountain

Old mountain
Credit: DeAgostini/Getty Images

"Machu Picchu" roughly translated to "old mountain," and Bingham saw exactly why. Its former denizens carved terraces right into the mountainside, where they could farm crops without having to return to the valley.

Strange layout

Strange layout
Credit: DEA/G. DAGLI ORTI/De Agostini via Getty Images

Curiously, the couple hundred buildings in the settlement didn't resemble any other urban layout designed by the Incas. Clear divisions separated groups of stone structures, many of which didn't appear to be residential.

Historical treasure

Historical treasure
Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Following Bingham's discovery, Machu Picchu quickly established itself as one of the marvels of the known world. Archaeologists continued to flock there to figure out why the Incas built a city in the mountains.

Strange artifacts

Strange artifacts
Credit: Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

One of the bigger surprises was the abundance of sacred artifacts scattered throughout the settlement. Though the number of houses indicated that about 750 people lived there, Machu Picchu had entire sections devoted solely to religion.

Pieces of the puzzle

Pieces of the puzzle
Credit: wildeastmofo/Reddit

More luxurious residences were set aside for Inca nobles, who used them as a retreat while smaller houses likely served as temporary lodging for pious Incas making a pilgrimage. Historians found many references to a chief deity.

Inti

Inti
Credit: Jan Sochor/Latincontent/Getty Images

That would be Inti, the Inca god of the sun. The elevation and labyrinthine layout of Machu Picchu reflected his astronomical prominence, though some of Inti's followers paid tribute to him in the most horrific way possible.

Grisly sacrifices

Grisly sacrifices
Credit: Ruben Charles/Wikimedia Commons | CC BY 2.0

Various relics and skeletal remains around the city suggested that residents of Machu Picchu regularly practiced human sacrifice — often with children. Grisly as these killings were, they were only the second darkest mystery buried within the city's walls.

Where did they go?

Where did they go?
Credit: Anibal Solimano/Getty Images

Of course, the biggest question asked where all the people of Machu Picchu went. Although it was far from a metropolis, 750 people didn't just disappear overnight. And the city didn't show any signs of an attack or natural disaster.

Diseased downfall

Diseased downfall
Credit: Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images

With those options off the table, many theorize that disease is to blame. European contact with the New World unleashed a legion of diseases. The demise of Machu Picchu likely came from a smallpox outbreak, as the Incas had no resistance or medicine for it.

Tourist upswell

Tourist upswell
Credit: Federico Tovoli/VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

However, the greatest threat to this wonder may just be arriving. Each year, 1.5 million well-intentioned tourists visit Machu Picchu, but their crowded presence tears up the ground and leaves behind litter.

Airport proposal

Airport proposal
Credit: Gläser/ullstein bild via Getty Images

Recognizing the city as a cash cow, the Peruvian government has also considered building an airport right by the secluded site. Machu Picchu's excessive popularity could wipe out the last vestige of Inca life. Some are frantically working to unlock its secrets before it's too late.

Rualdo Menegat

Rualdo Menegat
Credit: Anna Gorin/Getty Images

One such specialist is geologist Rualdo Menegat, who has been studying Machu Picchu for years in a bid to unravel the mystery of its construction. At times, then, he conducted field work at dizzyingly high altitudes, taking measurements from the ancient city itself. On other occasions, however, he pored over data in a laboratory thousands of miles away from the Andean peaks.

A new perspective

A new perspective
Credit: Apollo/Flickr | CC BY 2.0

Finally, in 2019, Menegat was ready to reveal the fruits of his labor to his peers. So, at an annual gathering of geologists, he outlined his theories about how Machu Picchu had been built – and why. And now these remarkable findings are inspiring others to look at the Inca Empire in a whole new light.

Strange techniques

Strange techniques
Credit: Apexphotos/Getty Images

Today, it’s believed that the Incas used a dry-stone technique to build the city’s remarkable stone walls. Essentially, this means that the rocks were cut and fitted together without utilizing mortar. But how did these ancient people carry out such a detailed and challenging feat? And why did they choose to do it in such an isolated spot?

Seeking isolation

Seeking isolation
Credit: NuevoLeón.Travel/YouTube

Well, Menegat – a researcher at Brazil’s Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul – sought to answer those questions. He noted, too, that the Incas appeared to have made a habit of constructing their cities in isolated and inaccessible locations. And as a geologist, he believed that the reason for this choice may lie somewhere below the ground.

Knowing the land

Knowing the land
Credit: Kasman/Pixabay

“It seemed to me that no civilization could be established in the Andes without knowing the rocks and mountains of the region,” Menegat explained to Newsweek in September 2019. “It could not be built on a whim. It is part of a practice of building settlements in high rocky places. But what guides this practice? What knowledge of the rocks and mountains did builders need to know to succeed in building cities under these conditions?”

Mapping the area

Mapping the area
Credit: William Yu Photography/Getty Images

According to Menegat, this area had also not been explored by any previous research, leading him to set out to conduct his own study of the geology surrounding Machu Picchu. Using a combination of satellite photos and measurements taken at the site, he began to map the tectonic faults that crisscross the region.

Living on fault lines

Living on fault lines
Credit: Kasman/Pixabay

Long before the Incas and Machu Picchu emerged, though, the Andes Mountains had been created by a great geological upheaval. Millions of years ago, the two sections of Earth’s crust known as the Nazca Plate and the South American Plate collided. And as the Nazca Plate was pushed beneath the South American Plate, a high ridge of rock formed.

Going deep

Going deep
Credit: Frank-am-Main/Flickr | CC BY-SA 2.0

In an attempt to understand the landscape surrounding Machu Picchu, then, Menegat conducted four separate field trips to the region. When he wasn’t up in the mountains, meanwhile, he pored over data in his university laboratory. And along with satellite imagery, Menegat used previous geological studies of the area to inform his research.

Checking the work

Checking the work
Credit: Frank-am-Main/Flickr | CC BY-SA 2.0

What’s more, Menegat was impressively thorough with his work. “At each stage of the research, I presented the results to Peruvian researchers from various fields of knowledge – geology, archeology, anthropology, architecture, urbanism, landscape ecology, and epistemology – and regions of Peru, so as to assure me of the correctness of data... I also evaluate the scope and importance of my findings for Andean culture researchers,” he explained to Newsweek.

An insurance nightmare

An insurance nightmare
Credit: Apollo/Flickr | CC BY 2.0

Eventually, though, Menegat’s research led him to a singular startling conclusion. It seemed that Machu Picchu had been constructed in a spot that most modern builders would steadfastly avoid: right on top of a series of tectonic faults. In fact, an entire network of cracks in the Earth’s crust seemingly ran beneath the city.

100 mile fissure

100 mile fissure
Credit: Stanley Chen Xi/Getty Images

And according to Menegat, these faults vary in size. Indeed, while some of these breaks are little more than fissures, others stretch considerable distances beneath the mountains, with one particularly impressive example clocking in at more than 100 miles in length. A number of the faults also travel from northwest to southeast, while others run from northeast to southwest.

X marks the spot

X marks the spot
Credit: Frank-am-Main/Flickr | CC BY-SA 2.0

In fact, there’s so much geological activity here that five separate faults converge beneath Machu Picchu – creating an ominous X to mark the spot. And Menegat believes that this is unlikely to be a coincidence. Instead, he has argued that the tumultuous terrain is integral to the structure of the city itself.

Building on the fault lines

Building on the fault lines
Credit: Alexander Yates/Getty Images

While studying Machu Picchu, you see, Menegat observed that all of its main structures were built in alignment with the faults beneath the city. “The layout clearly reflects the fracture matrix underlying the site,” he explained in a press release from the Geological Society of America. And, shockingly, the mountain stronghold of the Incas is not the only settlement to have been built in such a manner.

Consistent style

Consistent style
Credit: Bcasterline/Wikimedia Commons

Yes, Menegat discovered that a number of additional Inca cities also appear to be aligned along geological features. The ruins of Ollantaytambo – which lie less than 20 miles from Machu Picchu – are also believed to be located at the intersection of several tectonic faults. And 50 miles to the east at Pisac, a similar underlying structure can be found.

Old superstition

Old superstition
Credit: Diego Delso/Wikimedia Commons | CC BY-SA 4.0

Menegat even claims that the Inca capital of Cusco was once constructed in alignment with the geological faults beneath the city. But why would these ancient people have chosen to build their settlements in such a way? Could it be the result of an age-old superstition, or perhaps even a choice with ritualistic connotations?

Using the lines

Using the lines
Credit: Westend61/Getty Images

Well, Menegat believes that Inca culture actually had nothing to do with it. On September 23, 2019, the researcher presented his findings at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Phoenix, Arizona. And during his talk, the researcher put forward a novel explanation: the Incas actually used the faults to lighten the physical load of building cities.

Perfect materials

Perfect materials
Credit: Pedro Szekely/Flickr | CC BY-SA 2.0

Yes, according to Menegat, the Incas specifically sought out areas of geological turmoil as locations for their cities. Since the stoneworkers who built the famously perfect walls were experts at their craft, the specialist claims, they knew that the fractured rocks found above tectonic faults would provide the perfect building material.

Working with the land

Working with the land
Credit: Kenneth Lu/Flickr | CC BY 2.0

“Where faults intersect, the rocks are even more fractured,” Menegat told Newsweek. “Therefore, they are places that have more loose blocks on the surface, and [these are] also places where [the rocks] can be easily removed to build terraces and buildings.” That wasn’t the only advantage to constructing cities on these sites, however.

Naturally geometric

Naturally geometric
Credit: guido da rozze/Flickr | CC BY-ND 2.0

Menegat has gone on to explain that the fractured rock was also naturally set into geometric shapes such as hexagons and triangles – meaning the materials should have slotted together more smoothly. And if the pieces of stone were not the correct shape, then their fragile nature would have made it easier to cut them down.

Easy to carve

Easy to carve
Credit: burroblando/Getty Images

“The intense fracturing there predisposed the rocks to break along these same planes of weakness, which greatly reduced the energy needed to carve them,” Menegat explained in the press release. In fact, in the geologist’s opinion, the construction of Machu Picchu would have been “impossible” without these conditions.

Sophisticated water system

Sophisticated water system
Credit: Mark L/Flickr | CC BY-SA 2.0

However, Machu Picchu’s position on top of several tectonic faults didn’t just make the workload easier. According to Menegat, this specific geology also funneled melted ice and precipitation towards the city, which in turn provided a ready source of clean water to the community in spite of the inaccessible mountain location.

Making the inhospitable hospitable

Making the inhospitable hospitable
Credit: Leandro Lutz/EyeEm/Getty Images

“The Andean world is inhospitable,” Menegat told Newsweek. “Here, human life is possible only in a few places where water drips through fractures. The Incas knew to follow this criterion, which allowed them to establish networks of settlements in this kind of oasis of habitability provided by the faults and fractures.”

Supporting 10 million

Supporting 10 million
Credit: Fabio Lamanna/EyeEm/Getty Images

Owing to the water that came from the mountains, then, the Incas didn’t need to build in the low valleys – thus reducing the risk of danger from rockfall and flooding. And these unlikely but surprisingly sustainable cities were so successful that in total they were able to support a population of some ten million people.

Natural drainage

Natural drainage
Credit: Maria Swärd/Getty Images

But Menegat believes that the fractured rock beneath Machu Picchu had yet another purpose. While heavy rain was sometimes a problem even this high up in the Andes, the geology of the region could have provided natural drainage and so helped to protect the site from flooding. In fact, this feature may well have prevented the city from falling further into ruin after it was abandoned.

Genius subsurface

Genius subsurface
Credit: Calin Hertioga/Getty Images

“About two-thirds of the effort to build the sanctuary involved constructing subsurface drainage,” Menegat explained in the press release. “The pre-existing fractures aided this process and help account for its remarkable preservation. Machu Picchu clearly shows us that the Inca civilization was an empire of fractured rocks.”

Quijlo

Quijlo
Credit: William Yu Photography/Getty Images

Fascinatingly, Menegat also revealed that the Incas had their own way of describing the tectonic activity on which their cities were built. “There is a Quechua word for large fractures,” he told Newsweek. “As the great Peruvian writer José Maria Arguedas said, the Incas called the fractures that crossed the mountains ‘quijlo.’ Geologists call them faults.”

Reading the rocks

Reading the rocks
Credit: ajiravan/Getty Images

But does this mean that the people who built Machu Picchu had an incredibly advanced comprehension of geology for the time? Well, while they may not have known the cause of tectonic faults, Menegat believes that they could definitely spot them. “The Incas knew how to recognize intensely fractured zones and knew that they extended over long stretches,” he continued.

Lasting architecture

Lasting architecture
Credit: jopstock/Getty Images

Amazingly, then, the Incas’ knowledge of faults enabled them to build structures that were to last for more than 550 years. But just as researchers such as Menegat are beginning to understand the secrets of Machu Picchu, the ruins are more at risk than ever. If plans to construct an airport just a few miles away are carried out, the hub would bring dangerous numbers of visitors to the already crowded site. And although archaeologists are petitioning against the development, the future of the ancient city continues to hang in the balance – for now.

New Scans Find Hidden Neighboring Ruins

New Scans Find Hidden Neighboring Ruins
Credit: Illustrated

Recent aerial and ground surveys have pulled back the jungle curtain. Teams using drone-mounted LiDAR mapped more than a dozen previously unknown structures just outside the main citadel, including a ceremonial approach at Chachabamba. The scans also traced stone basins and channels that point to ritual baths and a planned path toward Machu Picchu. That layout ties straight into the site's spiritual and hydraulic design, showing the mountain was part of a bigger sacred network.

Child Offerings Put Into Clearer Context

Child Offerings Put Into Clearer Context
Credit: Illustrated

Modern bio-anthropological work has sharpened the picture of the sacrifices hinted at by early digs. The evidence lines up with the Inca ritual known as Capacocha, where selected children and young women were honored before being led to high-altitude shrines. Their graves often appear with tiny metal and shell figurines and finely made pins, signs that these were state rituals, not random violence. That helps explain the human remains Bingham and later teams found around the site.

Residents Were Recruited From Across Empire

Residents Were Recruited From Across Empire
Credit: Illustrated

New analyses show the people who lived and worked at the citadel were often not local farmers. Skeletal studies and artifact styles point to yanacona and aclla brought in from distant provinces to serve the elite. Signs like intentional cranial deformation mark a multicultural, empire-wide population, not a single local community. That fits with Machu Picchu acting as a seasonal retreat and religious center for the Inca elite.

Possible Chambers Lurk Under Temple Floors

Possible Chambers Lurk Under Temple Floors
Credit: Illustrated

Noninvasive 3D imaging has hinted at voids and cavities beneath the Temple of the Sun and other core buildings. Researchers are debating whether these are storage spaces, ritual foundations, or even hidden tombs tied to high-ranking figures. The government has kept access tight to avoid damage, so answers will be slow in coming. For now the scans only raise fresh questions about what lies beneath the famous stonework.

New Facts Strengthen the Case for Protection

New Facts Strengthen the Case for Protection
Credit: Illustrated

All this fresh work changes how we see Machu Picchu. The site now reads as a planned religious landscape with expert engineering, elite residents, and tightly scripted rites. Those discoveries add weight to the argument that Machu Picchu needs stronger protections against overcrowding and proposed development nearby. If the mountain's secrets matter, they need more careful stewardship than ever.