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This site was chosen with the purpose of recovering soil samples for the analysis of botanical remains from the Late Period through the excavation of four 4 1x1 m tests during November of 2002. The survey collections consistently yielded predominantly or only Cosanga pottery in this area. The site is on an unusually wide and gently inclined plateau at approximately 2,320 m above sea level that ends abruptly at a cliff that drops to the Quijos River approximately 400 m below. There are numerous artificial terraces throughout the area, and they are very well preserved. Terraces for housing and agriculture as well as shallow canals are very easily identifiable in the landscape. The agricultural terraces are smaller, shorter, and narrower than other agricultural terraces observed in other sites in the region, and they are not very pronounced, due to the gradual nature of the slope. The plateau is cut by various streams, and the landscape is dominated by pasture with a few isolated trees, although there are remnants of what may have been a thicker forest along streams and on steep slopes at the edges of this plateau. The site can be reached by foot from the road Baeza-Papallacta, descending to the Quijos River, crossing it by a suspension bridge, and ascending to the plateau through a path maintained by the local landowners. This terrain is currently used for pasture.