First Person Journalism: Chan Chan, Peru
On assignment for The CBS Evening News with Dan Rather, producer Bruce Rheins, correspondent Bill Whitaker, and their camera crew encountered a most spectacular record of El Nino's effects. Bruce's first-hand account, along with his spectacular pictures, is one in a continuing series of First Person Journalism reports for CBS.com.

Chan Chan is the largest city built of mud in the world; it is also the oldest city (as opposed to towns and villages) in the Americas, first built in the 11th Century. Being made of mud, it succumbed many times to various mega-Ninos over the centuries.
| Archaeologist Cesar Galvez thinks it was nearly completely rebuilt in the 13th Century, after a devastating El Nino melted nearly everything, and destroyed Chan Chan's canal system. | ![]() |
"The irrigation system was the basis of the Chimu society," he says. And to insure the gods' favor? "After El Nino rains, they killed the prisoners, and human sacrifices were a common practice."
![]() | Part of the story of El Nino can be seen in the intricate mud carvings, still preserved after nearly a thousand years. At one point, fish were the main decoration. |
| After mega-Ninos that drove the fish away, the Chimu carved rodents clled nutria; they are aquatic animals which survived when the fish went away. | ![]() |
![]() | Also, the walls inside Chan Chan's sanctuary represent fishing netsÂ…a plaintive appeal to the gods to restore their sustenance. |
| There may be no other place on earth that has recorded and displayd El Nino's effects as meticulously and thoroughly as Chan Chan, Peru. | ![]() |
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