Chiribaya culture

Chiribaya
c. 900–c. 1450
Extent of the Chiribaya culture in the middle of the 15th century.
Extent of the Chiribaya culture in the middle of the 15th century.
LocationAtacama Desert
Official languagesPuquina
Historical eraLate Intermediate
• Established
c. 900
• Disestablished
c. 1450
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Wari Empire
Inca Empire

The Chiribaya culture flourished near the coast of southern Peru and adjacent Chile from 700 CE until Spanish settlement in the late 16th century. The classic phase of the Chiribaya culture was from 1000 CE until 1360 CE. The Chiribaya culture consisted of both maritime settlements along 220 kilometres (140 mi) of the Pacific Ocean coast and agricultural settlements inland in valleys of the Osmore and Tambo rivers in Peru and the Lluta river and Azapa Valley in Chile.

The lower Osmore valley, one of the centers of the Chiribaya culture, has been extensively studied by archaeologists because it appears to have been colonized by both the Wari and Tihuanco empires and the later Lupaca people and the Inca Empire. These highland empires relied on the lower-altitude valleys to supply them with agricultural products such as maize and chile peppers.