Pumapunku sits like a carved heart within the larger Tiwanaku metropolis on the western shore of Lake Titicaca. Archaeological data indicates the stone plaza, finely dressed megaliths and complex masonry that characterize Pumapunku were created and reworked during the Tiwanaku Middle Horizon (roughly AD 400–1000). The monumental stones — precisely cut and fitted — reflect both technical mastery and a ritualized urban program of public architecture.
Limited excavation and stratigraphic study at Pumapunku mean that chronology remains partly debated; radiocarbon and architectural sequencing suggest major building phases during the broader Tiwanaku florescence. The single ancient DNA sample from Pumapunku, dated 670–774 CE, falls squarely within this tradition of highland urbanism and offers a rare biological glimpse into the people who used these spaces. While the architectural record speaks to collective labor, ritual performance and regional influence across the southern Andean altiplano, the genetic signal from this solitary individual must be treated cautiously: it can suggest individual maternal affiliation but cannot alone define population-level origins or movements.