I'm Chilean, and I lived in Bolivia back in 89. I used to travel back and forth all the time, so I got used to see lake Titicaca from the air, and a couple of times on the ground. The place is astonishingly beautiful. Pristine. Ancient. The Aymara people have the deepest connection with their land, and the lake, of any place I've ever been at.
I haven't been back in a long time, but whenever I hear about the Altiplano (the highlands) I get an overwhelming feeling of respect for their people, their land and their culture. In South America (at least definitely in Chile), we're obsessed with modernism, state-of-the-art highways and skyscrapers. Aymaras, on the other hand, seem to live in a place with no time, where even their language expresses the past in front, and the future behind. Their people continue to carve artifacts like that llama today, just like back then.
Maybe we are moving backwards through time and that’s why we can only see clearly into the past. As GP comment hinted at, it’s a matter of cultural perspective.
I don't think cultural perspective as much as pure philosophy. As a coder, I once realized that the entire universe's events could be an existing stack, and in that stack exists the events that create the universe, because of the requirement of consistency. Us experiencing time would just be those events being popped off that stack.
This stack view is equivalent to what you are saying, and there is no reason to believe it can't be the case since it does make consistency easily satiable.
The title is confusing. They found a llama miniature, not a miniature llama. Miniature ponies and miniature schnauzers are animals, but this is a figurine made of shell.
Abstract from the paper The context and meaning of an intact Inca underwater offering from Lake Titicaca [1]:
> As the Inca Empire expanded across the South American Andes during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries AD, Lake Titicaca became its mythical place of origin and the location of a pilgrimage complex on the Island of the Sun. This complex included an underwater reef where stone boxes containing miniature figurines of gold, silver and shell were submerged as ritual offerings. This article reports a newly discovered stone offering box from a reef close to the lake's north-eastern shore. The location, content and broader socio-cultural context of Inca sacrifices are examined to illuminate the religious and social meaning of underwater ritual offerings at Lake Titicaca.
The box was "at a depth of 5.50–5.80m below lake level" (18-19 feet) which a skilled swimmer can reach; I wonder if this might be a re-usable safe box rather than a "ritual offering".
That even seems within the range of variation of the water level. Google suggests [0] the water level rose 6m between 1943 and 1986 and generally fluctuates 1m or so each year. If that's typical, the box could have been at shore level, or well above, or 20m below in Inca times.
I haven't been back in a long time, but whenever I hear about the Altiplano (the highlands) I get an overwhelming feeling of respect for their people, their land and their culture. In South America (at least definitely in Chile), we're obsessed with modernism, state-of-the-art highways and skyscrapers. Aymaras, on the other hand, seem to live in a place with no time, where even their language expresses the past in front, and the future behind. Their people continue to carve artifacts like that llama today, just like back then.