Archaeologists identify 3,200-year-old temple mural of spider god in Peru
by Sam Jones from World news | The Guardian on (#5FS9H)
Mural discovered last year is thought to depict a zoomorphic, knife-wielding spider god associated with rain and fertility
Archaeologists in northern Peru have identified a 3,200-year-old mural painted on the side of an ancient adobe temple that is thought to depict a zoomorphic, knife-wielding spider god associated with rain and fertility.
The mural - applied in ochre, yellow, grey and white paint to the wall of the 15m by 5m mud brick structure in the Viru province of Peru's La Libertad region - was discovered last year after much of the site was destroyed by local farmers trying to extend their avocado and sugarcane plantations.
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