2025 Archaeology Field Experience: Archaeological Field Methods and Conservation (Peru)
Sponsored by
Archaeology Center
Funding:
See maximum funding amount and funding details below
Open To:
Freshman
Sophomore
Junior
Senior
Summer
Coming soon
This opportunity is coming soon.
Approximate Offer Date:
Monday, April 1, 2024
Chavín de Huántar is a UNESCO World Heritage site in the Central Andes of Peru. The site is a ceremonial center consisting of major temple mounds, plazas, and an intricate labyrinth of underground passageways of galleries and canals. Located in the north-central highlands of Peru, Chavín has long been recognized as the key site for understanding the beginnings of later Andean states and empires like the Inca. In particular, Chavín seems to have been a cult center where priestly leaders went to exceptional lengths - including using hallucinogenic drugs and manipulating light and sound within mystifying complex architecture - to convince elite Andean contemporaries of the validity of their supernatural authority.
Undergraduate Field Experience
The Chavín de Huántar field experience has both pre-departure and post-return training requirements. Accepted field experience students will be in contact with Professor Rick and Archaeology Center staff to schedule the pre-departure training for the Spring quarter.
The basic goal of the Chavín field experience is to give Stanford students field training in a broad range of archaeological research methodologies, taking advantage of the operation of Associate Professor Emeritus John Rick’s major archaeological project in the World Heritage site of Chavín de Huántar. For seven weeks from July - August 2025, students will participate in major excavations, including those on the surface those of the original drainage canals, as well as in newly discovered underground spaces. Researchers' efforts will be split between investigation, in which we are pursuing intellectual goals for understanding the past of the site, and conservation, in which we are trying to improve the perspectives for this monumental site’s survival into the future.