ML148406
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Subject 1: (Interview). Subtitle: Chip Stanish. Timecode In: 00:00:06. Timecode out: 01:06:00. Notes: Ancient civilizations of Peru. Subject 2: (Sound Effects). Subtitle: Small rock tumbling down hillside. Timecode In: 00:02:02. Timecode out: 00:02:09. Subject 3: (Sound Effects). Subtitle: Thunder. Timecode In: 01:07:48. Timecode out: 01:08:02. Subject 4: (Sound Effects). Subtitle: Thunder. Timecode In: 01:09:30. Timecode out: 01:12:48. Equipment Notes: Decoded MS Stereo. NPR/NGS RADIO EXPEDITIONS Show: Peru Log of DAT #: 7 Engineer: Leo del Aguila Date: November 13, 2001 ng = not good ok = okay g = good vg = very good 0:06 AC Okay, so where¿what¿s our elevation again? 0:08 CS Yeah, we started around 3950 meters about, on that river bed, and we¿re going to work our way up to probably like 4025-75 meters in elevation. Doesn¿t seem like a lot but you feel it. 0:23 AC It seems like a lot. What is that in feet? 0:26 CS Oh, that would be ah, 12¿that would be around 13 thousand and some feet. 0:33 AC Okay. It feels like something. 0:35 CS Yeah. (laughs) Just you gotta go, the ah, the people here are really smart. When I was a younger guy working they, they¿d always say, ¿you know, you¿re walking like a gringo. You walk real fast, then you get tired and you rest. And you gotta do it like us. You just pick your pace and you go and you never stop. If your pace is really slow that¿s fine. But just pick your pace.¿ I still stop though. [walking, breathing] (1:16) You can already see some little indications of ah, people were living here. There¿s bits and pieces of ah, pottery and stone tools. Not real dense but there¿s some stuff here. 2:02-2:08: FX: small rock falling down the hillside. 2:13 FX good bird chirping. 2:25-2:30 heavy breathing. 2:32 Leo How¿re you feeling? 2:34 AC I¿m ah, I¿m winded. I¿m winded and we haven¿t come very far. [breathing hard] The elevation here¿s about 13,000 feet and it¿s not really especially steep, but it¿s 13,000 feet¿.Okay. 3:19 CS These are all original walls, going up. They were both agricultural and defensive we believe. And they¿re all still nice and intact. 3:31 AC And are you getting a are you getting a kind of sense of the date of this community? 3:40 CS Yeah I think we¿re looking at ah, ah from the latest date the 15th century AD and I suspect this is going to go back to around 500AD. That¿s my feel from the ah, from the little bit of pottery I¿ve seen and the architecture that we¿re going to have. 3:59 AC Okay. 4:00-6:05 ambi. Occasional bird chirping in the background. Boots trudging up the hill. Occasional breathing sounds. Occasional sound of a plastic bag or something similar rustling. 6:06 CS You can see small agricultural and soil control terracing all the way up. There¿s an old corral there. 6:15 AC It goes all the way up to the face of rock up there. 6:17 CS Yup. 6:18 AC And even above it. Even in the places where there¿s bare rock, down the face of that hill, in between the faces of bare rock they¿ve done terracing. 6:31 CS Every inch of ground that can be cultivated is cultivated, it¿s so valuable here. And that¿s, those are very old terraces, these are 500 years or more old. 6:55 walking ambi. 7:13, 7:27, 7:43, 7:58 FX rooster crowing far away. 7:51 AC Is that llama? 7:54-8:24 truck going by a little ways off. 8:15 CS Yeah, I didn¿t know they would be this high, sorry. Never been here. 8:19 AC This is where they are. 8:20 CS Yup¿What we¿ll actually, well, we¿re going to hit some houses, structures probably. I mean, every other site that I¿ve seen like this has houses. 8:38 AC What about that little thing way up on top there Chip, way up on top of the hill, that¿s a little structure, I can see it must be stone? 8:45 CS That¿s... (Notes truncated)
Technische Angaben
- Aufnahmegerät
- SONY TCD-D8
- Mikrofon
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Archivierungsinformationen
- katalogisisert
- 16 Dec 2009 - Ben Brotman
- digitalisiert
- 16 Dec 2009 - Ben Brotman
- editiert
- 16 Dec 2009 - Ben Brotman