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Pre-Inca culture acquired Amazonian parrots from hundreds of miles away to use their feathers to decorate the dead, new analysis reveals

Around 1,000 years ago, a pre-Inca culture acquired wild parrots from hundreds of miles away in the Amazon rainforest and then kept them captive in what is now coastal Peru, all so people could access the birds’ vibrant feathers, which were “prestigious symbols of status,” a new study finds.

Researchers found some of these feathers in a 1,000-year-old tomb about 20 years ago. Now, a new analysis reveals the “complete journey of these feathers,” including where the birds originated, what they ate, and which routes the live birds were likely carried on before being traded to the Yschma, a pre-Inca society that flourished from about A.D. 1000 to 1470.

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