15 April 2026 The Future is the Product of the Past

A Little-Known Civilization in the Americas Built Pyramids as Old as Ancient Egypt

Considered the cradle of civilization in the Americas, the Sacred City of Caral-Supe is a 5000-year-old archaeological site, situated on a dry desert terrace, overlooking the green valley of the Supe River in Peru.

The Sacred City of Caral-Supe is a complex of pyramids and sunken circular courts only just discovered in 1948.

The Sacred City of Caral-Supe is home to an extraordinary complex of ancient monumental architecture built approximately 2600 B.C., around the same period as the first Egyptian pyramid. Archaeologists think Caral to be one of the largest and most sophisticated urban centers established by the Western Hemisphere’s earliest known civilization.

With a foundation that roughly equals four football fields in size, its biggest pyramid, also known as Pirámide Mayor, is almost 100 feet tall. The site has been estimated to be between 4,000 and 5,000 years old using radiocarbon dating on organic material, making its construction at least as old as the Step Pyramid of Saqqara, the oldest known pyramid in ancient Egypt.

The Sacred City of Caral-Supe
The Sacred City of Caral-Supe

Caral is now one of the oldest known cities in the Western Hemisphere, thanks to this astonishing find. Coastal Peru has long been thought to be one of the six acknowledged cradles of human civilisation, and fresh archaeological findings continue to push back the dates of the region’s “mother culture.”



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



To put things in context, the City of Caral-Supe flourished at the same time the Egyptians were constructing their pyramids. Caral society’s complexity as a sociopolitical state is reflected in the city’s structure and architecture, while artifacts discovered at the site, such as the quipu (the same knot system the Incas subsequently employed to store information), demonstrate the civilization’s influence on succeeding Andean civilizations.

The design of both the architectural and spatial components of the city is masterful, and the monumental platform mounds and recessed circular courts are powerful and influential expressions of a consolidated state.

Pirámide Mayor de Caral
Pirámide Mayor de Caral

Caral was the first of over two dozen fully excavated sites along Peru’s central coast known as the Norte Chico region. Archaeologists think the sites collectively reflect the Americas’ earliest core of civilization, which existed from 3000 to 1800 B.C. and was totally uninfluenced by outside factors. It flourished over 4,000 years before the mighty Incan Empire began.

The city design and several of its components, such as pyramidal structures and elite residences, clearly exhibit indications of ceremonial activities, signifying a powerful religious ideology.

No trace of warfare has been found at Caral: no battlements, no weapons, no mutilated bodies. Findings suggest it was a gentle society, built on commerce and pleasure.

In 2009, the City of Caral-Supe has declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its still visible representation of Late Archaic architecture and town planning, the highly-developed and complex culture that once inhabited it, and their influence on later Andean civilizations.

Cover Photo: Sacred City of Caral-Supe (Peru). Christopher Kleihege

Related Articles

Scientists find the oldest evidence of humans in Israel -a 1.5 million-year-old Human vertebra

3 February 2022

3 February 2022

An international group of Israeli and American researchers, an ancient human vertebra has been uncovered in Israel’s Jordan Valley that...

The first time in Anatolia, a legionnaires’ cemetery belonging to the Roman Empire unearthed

18 November 2022

18 November 2022

In the ancient city of Satala, in the Kelkit district of Gümüşhane in the Eastern Black Sea region of Turkey,...

2,500-Year-Old Mysterious Clay Artifact Discovered Near Jarosław May Be Poland’s First Pintadera

16 February 2026

16 February 2026

A mysterious clay artifact discovered near Jarosław in southeastern Poland may represent the first known pintadera ever found in the...

Archaeologists Uncover Astonishing Viking-Age Grave in Norway — A Discovery Unlike Anything Seen Before

15 November 2025

15 November 2025

Archaeologists in central Norway have revealed a groundbreaking Viking-age find that has been kept secret for months. At Val in...

Excavations at Sheffield Castle Reveal the First Surviving Examples of 17th-Century Civil War Abatis

9 March 2025

9 March 2025

Excavations at Sheffield Castle, part of the Castlegate regeneration project by Sheffield City Council, have revealed the first known surviving...

History of 8,500 years waits for a museum

19 June 2023

19 June 2023

The conservation process of the Yenikapı shipwrecks, which were discovered during the Marmaray project and considered the largest collection of...

Archaeologists Reveals Rare Evidence of Early Human Presence in Tajikistan

6 November 2024

6 November 2024

Archaeologists have discovered a multi-layered archaeological site in the Zeravshan Valley of central Tajikistan that reveals early human settlement in...

Drought Unveils Lost Hellenistic-Era City and Cemetery Beneath Mosul Dam

30 August 2025

30 August 2025

Severe drought conditions in northern Iraq have uncovered a remarkable archaeological treasure. The discovery, revealed as water levels at the...

A Giant Stone Panel Discovered in Mexico Reveals the Name of a Previously Unknown Maya King’s

14 August 2024

14 August 2024

Archaeologists from Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) have discovered a fascinating panel containing an extensive Maya hieroglyphic...

A Celtiberian city more than 2000 years old found in Spain

16 July 2023

16 July 2023

The Polytechnic University of Madrid announced the discovery of a Roman camp and the Celtiberian city of Titiakos in the...

Researchers Examine 4,000 Bricks to Solve the Secrets of an Ancient Roman Metropolis of Trier

12 April 2025

12 April 2025

Trier, once a significant economic and political center in the northern provinces of the Roman Empire, is set to be...

In the ancient city of Syedra: a unique mosaic with the 12 labors of Heracles depicted on a single panel found

25 July 2022

25 July 2022

During the excavations in the ancient city of Syedra in the Alanya district of Antalya, approximately 164 square meters of...

A 5,000-year-old large house has been discovered in China’s Yangshao Village

7 December 2022

7 December 2022

Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Heritage and Archaeology archaeologists have excavated the ruins of house foundations dating back more than...

Evidence of Rare Romano-Celtic Temple Near Lancaster Castle -may be only the second of its type –

10 March 2023

10 March 2023

A study exercise for students from Lancaster University has uncovered a Romano-Celtic temple, only the second of its type in...

Archaeologists uncover a 1,500-year-old Lost Mayan city in the Yucatan

28 May 2022

28 May 2022

Researchers have presented their findings after discovering the remnants of an ancient Mayan city on a building site in Mexico....