How did pre-Hispanic Peru respond to natural events caused by El Niño phenomenon?

Photo: PRAET-PUCP

Photo: PRAET-PUCP

12:35 | Lima, Feb. 4.

A new El Niño event is emerging in Peru's climate outlook. According to the latest report from the Multisectoral Commission in Charge of the National Study of El Niño Phenomenon (ENFEN), a weak El Niño is expected.

However, in Peruvians' collective memory, El Niño is associated with catastrophic events—extreme rainfall, river overflows, and damage to homes, roads, bridges, and other infrastructure—such as those recorded in 1983, 1997, 2017, and 2023, among other examples.

But El Niño phenomenon has been present throughout Peru's entire history, as demonstrated by pre-Hispanic evidence uncovered by archaeologists and researchers.

These cultures developed effective solutions to cope with natural events.


This was revealed by Ana Cecilia Mauricio, director of the "Lessons from the Past" research project in an interview with Andina News Agency.

Mauricio leads studies at the Salinas de Chao Archaeological Site, located on the country's northern coast, in the current Chao Valley, La Libertad region.

A disaster mitigation system over 4,000 years old

The archaeologist stated that research conducted at Salinas de Chao has made it possible to identify a set of large retaining walls, built between 4,000 and 3,800 years before the present, which are so far considered the oldest evidence of disaster-mitigation infrastructure in Peru.

"It is a monumental site covering about 16 hectares, with large plazas and public structures, located at the foot of a chain of hills. During the explorations, we identified large-scale walls that were not associated with ceremonial or residential architecture," she explained.


The expert noted that these walls, strategically built at the foot of large ravines, reach imposing dimensions.

"We have found evidence that these walls were up to 33 meters long and are perfectly preserved, although they may originally have exceeded 50 meters, standing five meters high and five meters wide. They are made of large stones—some measuring more than one meter—bound together with mud and clay-rich sediments," she underlined.

Defense against extreme rainfall caused by El Niño phenomenon

Ana Cecilia Mauricio said the location and characteristics of these structures led the research team to propose the hypothesis that they were retaining walls designed to halt landslides, triggered by intense rainfall associated exclusively with El Niño events, whether coastal or global.

This hypothesis was confirmed through excavations, sediment analysis, high-resolution topographic surveys, digital terrain models, and radiocarbon dating.

The results show that the walls retained sediments coming from the ravines and, to this day, continue to protect the site's architecture.

"These structures not only functioned in the past but continue to fulfill their purpose thousands of years later," the archaeologist emphasized.

Climate, innovation, and adaptation

The researcher highlighted that the dating of the walls coincides with paleoclimatic studies indicating an increase in the frequency and intensity of El Niño events around 4,000 years ago — a key period in the climatic history of Peru's coastline.

"This climatic phenomenon spurred technological innovation. Populations understood their environment, studied the site's geology, and developed solutions to mitigate the impacts of rainfall," Mauricio indicated.

The communities that inhabited Salinas de Chao belonged to the preceramic period, a stage prior to the use of pottery and the formation of states or empires.

They were communal organizations that, with limited resources and without complex technology, managed to build effective protection systems using local materials such as stone and mud.

A lesson that remains relevant for present-day Peru

According to the researcher, the finding leaves a clear message: El Niño does not have to inevitably translate into disaster.

"Today, every El Niño event finds us underprepared. Bridges, schools, homes, and farmland get destroyed. By contrast, ancient populations not only protected themselves but even knew how to harness the rains to make the desert productive," Mauricio underlined.

In addition to the retaining walls, she reported evidence of excess-water channeling, the use of sediments to create farmland, and the expansion of agricultural areas in valleys such as Chao and Chicama.

Replicable ancestral infrastructure

Ana Cecilia Mauricio noted that this type of solution can be adapted to the present day, especially in low-resource communities, which are often the most affected by extreme climate events.

"It is not about literally copying these structures, but about understanding the principle: studying the environment, knowing the risks, and designing local solutions with accessible materials," she emphasized.

A legacy repeated throughout history

While Salinas de Chao represents the oldest known evidence, later records point to similar infrastructure during the Moche and Chimu periods, as well as at sites such as Manchan, demonstrating a continuity of ancestral knowledge in addressing climate-related risks.

"Ancient Peru had a different way of relating to El Niño. That accumulated experience is knowledge we should recover and apply," she concluded.

(END) MAO/MVB

Publicado: 4/2/2026