Peru fire ravages ancient archaeological site

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Mon, 13 Nov 2017 - 12:30 GMT

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Mon, 13 Nov 2017 - 12:30 GMT

Undated handout picture released by the Tumbas Reales de Sipan Museum showing an excavation site in a 1200-year-old ceremonial temple used to sacrifice women, belonging to the pre-Incaic cultures of Peru's Lambayeque region

Undated handout picture released by the Tumbas Reales de Sipan Museum showing an excavation site in a 1200-year-old ceremonial temple used to sacrifice women, belonging to the pre-Incaic cultures of Peru's Lambayeque region

LIMA - 13 November 2017: A fire destroyed a 2,000-year-old mural and much of the vestiges of an archaeological site in northern Peru on Sunday, the director of the Tumbas Reales de Sipan Museum said.

"I have received the lamentable and tragic news of a fire that has destroyed the archaeological monument of Ventarron," museum head Walter Alva said in a statement.

The temple of Ventarron dates back 4,500 years and is considered the oldest discovered in the Americas.

The fire devastated the ancient mural as well as pottery vessels and records of the Ventarron Archaeological Comoplex in Pomalca, in the Lambayeque region, television images showed.

Workers from the Pomalca agribusiness company triggered the blaze when they ignited a sugarcane field.

"We are losing an exceptional monument unique to its generation," said Alva, who discovered the site in 2007. "I hope there is an investigation and responsibility established."

"I can only express my outrage and sadness for this irreparable loss."

Firefighters said the fire is 95 percent controlled.

Prosecutors have gone to the area to assess the liability of Pomalca administrators.

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