The remains of four bodies dating back to 1,000AD have been discovered in a strange sitting position in a series of tombs.
Archaeologists discovered the skeletons of three adult women and one man in the middle of a residential neighbourhood in Lima, Peru, the Daily Mail reports.
They are part of a civilisation that dominated Peru before the rise of the Inca, and while the remains appear to have decomposed, archaeologists believe they were once wrapped in textiles in an attempt to mummify them.
The four skeletons, who were found in separate tombs, were part of the ancient Ichma culture that formed following the break-up of the South American Wari Empire before later being absorbed into the Inca Empire.
The figures, some of which still have hair, were found seated, looking out towards the sea, alongside offerings such as ceramics and weaving tools.
The exact reason for this position is still unclear, but archaeologists believe it must have had some ritual significance.
The Incas, and likely cultures before them including the Ichma, believed there was a link between the living and the gods.
As a result, mummies would be ‘consulted’ on important occasions and were often given “places of honour” near temples and on high ground.
The living used artificial techniques such as embalming and drying out the flesh, known as desiccation, to preserve their dead.
Spanish conquerors during the 16th century were reportedly so disgusted by the ritual that they destroyed many mummies after looting their graves.
This may explain the lack of other artefacts, and even the cloth the mummies were wrapped in, in the newly-discovered tombs.
It is the latest in a number of ancient tombs to be discovered in Peru’s capital, but these are among the first from the Ichma, or Ychsma era, helping to provide new clues about this little known, early culture.
Isabel Flores, an archaeologist and director of the excavation at Huaca Pucllana, the ancient ceremonial complex in the Miraflores district of Lima where the skeletons were found, zzz . said: “There are four human burial sites, for adult individuals, three women and one man, who lived between the years 1000 to 1450.
“These are the first four tombs of the Ichma culture. We think that we may still find more.”
The discovery of the tombs has allowed archaeologists to confirm that the Ichma culture, which dominated the central coast of Peru, had a foothold in Lima.
It dominated the area south of Lima in the Lurin Valley from 1,000AD and later spread north into the Rimac Valley.
It was later absorbed into the Inca Empire in around 1440.