There is no doubt that the Incas possessed a system for observing and interpreting unusual astronomical phenomena, such as eclipses or comets. References to it, however, are scarce, often of anecdotal nature and are not collected into any coherent “Inca observation catalog”. The best documented of such events is the “Ataw Wallpa-s comet”, seen in Cajamarca in July of 1533 and the solar eclipse, that in 1543, prevented conquistador Lucas Martínez from discovering the rich silver mines in northern Chile. Archived descriptions of the Andean population-s reaction to these phenomena indicate that they were treated as extremely important omens, that should not, under any circumstances, be ignored.
CITATION STYLE
Ziółkowski, M. (2015). Observations of comets and eclipses in the Andes. In Handbook of Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy (pp. 913–920). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-6141-8_74
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