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La Chocolatera: Difference between revisions

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<div style="font-family:Georgia,serif; font-size:11px; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-bottom:12px;">[[Main Page|EcuaWiki]] › [[Portal:The Peninsula|The Peninsula]] › [[Culture & History (La Peninsula)|Culture & History]] › Museos</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:11px; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-bottom:12px;">[[Main Page|EcuaWiki]] › [[Portal:The Peninsula|The Peninsula]] › [[Outdoor Activities (La Peninsula)|Outdoor Activities]] › Natural Sites</div>


<div style="font-family:Georgia,serif; font-size:2.5em; font-weight:bold; letter-spacing:1px; line-height:1.1; margin-bottom:6px; color:#f5e8c8;">Museo Los Amantes<br><span style="font-style:italic; font-weight:normal; color:#d4a853;">de Sumpa</span></div>
<div style="font-family:Georgia,serif; font-size:2.6em; font-weight:bold; letter-spacing:1px; line-height:1.05; margin-bottom:8px;">La Chocolatera<br><span style="font-size:0.5em; font-weight:normal; font-style:italic; color:#7dd4f0; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase;">Puntilla de Santa Elena</span></div>


<div style="font-family:Georgia,serif; font-size:0.95em; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.6); max-width:540px; line-height:1.7; margin-bottom:24px;">A 9,000-year-old embrace. The oldest documented cemetery in the Americas — and the most human story on the peninsula.</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.9em; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.65); max-width:560px; line-height:1.7; margin-bottom:24px;">The westernmost tip of Ecuador's continental coast. Where two ocean currents collide, waves turn chocolate-brown, sea lions sleep on sun-warmed rocks, and humpback whales surface just offshore.</div>


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<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#d4a853; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">~8,500 BC</div>
<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#7dd4f0; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">52,231 ha</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Earliest occupation</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Marine reserve area</div>
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<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#d4a853; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">200+</div>
<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#7dd4f0; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">~50</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Human skeletons in situ</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Marine & bird species</div>
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<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#d4a853; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">Gratuito</div>
<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#7dd4f0; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">Gratuito</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Free entry</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Free entry</div>
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<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#d4a853; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">4 salas</div>
<div style="font-size:1.4em; font-weight:bold; color:#7dd4f0; line-height:1; font-family:Georgia,serif;">ID req.</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Permanent galleries</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; color:rgba(255,255,255,0.4); margin-top:2px;">Military base checkpoint</div>
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<div style="font-style:italic; font-size:1.05em; color:#6b3a10; line-height:1.7; margin-bottom:18px; padding-left:16px; border-left:3px solid #d4a853;">"Under a glass floor in a quiet building in Santa Elena, two people lie as they have for nearly nine thousand years — arms around each other, facing the same direction, undisturbed."</div>
<div style="font-style:italic; font-size:1.05em; color:#1a5a7a; line-height:1.7; margin-bottom:18px; padding-left:16px; border-left:3px solid #0093c4;">"The waves don't just crash here — they collide from two directions at once. The result is a churning, frothing brown cauldron at the tip of the continent, with rainbows forming in the spray and sea lions watching from the rocks like they own the place. They do."</div>


The '''Museo Los Amantes de Sumpa''' is a site museum built directly on top of one of South America's most significant archaeological discoveries: the Las Vegas culture settlement of '''Sitio OGSE-80''', on the Santa Elena Peninsula. The museum takes its name from a double burial found within the site's cemetery — a young man and woman interred in a close embrace, dating to approximately 7,000 years ago. The cemetery itself, with over 200 skeletons still in their original positions, is considered one of the oldest and largest in the Americas.
'''La Chocolatera''' is the most westerly point of Ecuador's continental coastline — the physical tip of the Santa Elena Peninsula, where the Pacific Ocean meets the peninsula's cliffs and the land runs out. It sits within the '''[[Reserva de Producción Faunística Marino Costero Puntilla de Santa Elena]]''' (REMACOPSE), a protected marine and coastal area established in 2008, and is accessed through the '''Base Naval de Salinas''', which means you need ID to get in.


Admission is free. The museum is administered by the [[Viceministerio de Cultura y Patrimonio]] and belongs to the Red de Museos del Ecuador.
Up to 300,000 visitors a year make the trip. Most come for the dramatic coastline; many come for the sea lion colony at Punta Brava; and from June to September, anyone who looks offshore long enough will likely spot humpback whales.


It is free, it is genuinely spectacular, and it is one of the few places on the peninsula where the sheer force of the Pacific becomes physical — something you feel in your chest when a wave hits the cliff face at full speed.


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<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; white-space:nowrap;">Los Amantes — The Story</span>
<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; white-space:nowrap;">Why "La Chocolatera"?</span>
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During excavations at OGSE-80, archaeologists uncovered something that stopped them: two young skeletons buried together, intentionally, facing each other in an embrace. The man's right arm rests across the woman's waist; his right leg lies over hers. The woman is in a slightly flexed position, one arm raised near her head. Both were between 20 and 25 years old at death.


The local population near the dig site, watching the excavations unfold, began calling them <i>los amantes de Sumpa</i> — the lovers of Sumpa, "Sumpa" being the original indigenous name for Santa Elena. The name stuck, the museum was named after them, and the surrounding neighborhood eventually took the name too.
The name comes from the colour of the water. At the tip of the puntilla, two ocean currents converge: the cold '''Humboldt Current''' sweeping up from the south, and the warmer '''Equatorial Current''' pushing in from the north. When their combined energy drives waves against the rocky headland, the churning water lifts dark volcanic sand from the seabed. The result — particularly after a large swell — is a frothy, dark-brown sea that genuinely resembles a giant bowl of chocolate. Add spray catching the equatorial sun and you get rainbows in the foam.


Whether they were lovers, siblings, or ritual partners is unknown. What is clear is that they were buried with intention and care — and that they have been together for roughly nine thousand years.
The name stuck. The neighbourhood around the naval base checkpoint uses it. The whole protected area is informally called La Chocolatera by everyone on the peninsula.


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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#6a6a6a; line-height:1.6; margin-bottom:4px;">The burial is displayed in situ under a protective vitrine in the cemetery gallery. Photography is permitted but flash is discouraged by museum staff.</div>




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<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; white-space:nowrap;">La Cultura Las Vegas</span>
<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; white-space:nowrap;">Geography & Significance</span>
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The Las Vegas culture is the earliest documented human culture on the Ecuadorian coast and one of the best-studied Early Holocene populations in all of South America. They occupied the Santa Elena Peninsula from roughly 10,800 to 6,600 years before present, through radically changing coastal conditions.
La Chocolatera marks the western extreme of Ecuador's continental territory. It is also the reference point from which Ecuador measures its maritime boundary into the Pacific a fact that gives it quiet but real geopolitical weight. The tip is visible as a distinct protrusion on satellite imagery; some sources describe it as visible from space.
 
The puntilla separates two distinct water bodies: the open '''Bahía de Santa Elena''' to the north, and the '''Golfo de Guayaquil''' to the south. This division is what drives the current collision that names the place.


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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; margin-bottom:5px;">Who they were</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#0093c4; margin-bottom:5px;">The reserve</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a3a00; line-height:1.6;">Unspecialised hunter-gatherers and fishermen living along a littoral zone — not nomadic wanderers but semi-sedentary coastal people with established settlements. They buried their dead beneath the floors of their homes, maintaining proximity to their ancestors. The OGSE-80 site accumulated for nearly 4,000 years continuously.</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#3a4a5a; line-height:1.6;">The REMACOPSE protects 52,231 hectares of marine habitat plus 203 hectares of terrestrial coast — cliffs, rocky shore, black-sand beach, and dry coastal scrub. Established in 2008, it is one of the few protected areas on Ecuador's central coast focused on marine productivity as well as wildlife.</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; margin-bottom:5px;">Why they matter globally</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#0093c4; margin-bottom:5px;">The beach</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a3a00; line-height:1.6;">Las Vegas people are among the earliest cultivators in the Americas. Archaeological evidence from OGSE-80 includes bottle gourd (<i>Lagenaria siceraria</i>) and primitive maize (<i>Zea mays</i>) dating before 8,000 years ago — placing them among the first human groups to deliberately cultivate plants on the continent.</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#3a4a5a; line-height:1.6;">La Chocolatera's beach itself is short (under a kilometre), narrow (around 30 metres wide), and composed of dark, medium-grained volcanic sand. It is windswept, high-surf, and unsuitable for swimming but striking. Access is on foot along a signed path from the main mirador.</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; margin-bottom:5px;">The cemetery</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a3a00; line-height:1.6;">Over 200 human skeletons were recovered from OGSE-80, making it one of the largest pre-ceramic burial assemblages in the New World. The remains remain in their original location — the museum was built around and over them. Excavations were led by anthropologist Karen E. Stothert beginning in the 1970s, after the site was identified by American archaeologist Edward Lanning in 1964.</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; margin-bottom:5px;">What they ate</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a3a00; line-height:1.6;">Marine fish, shellfish (mollusks and crustaceans), terrestrial game, and wild plants supplemented increasingly by cultivated species as the Las Vegas phase progressed. Faunal analysis shows intensive use of both the littoral zone and the dry coastal forest behind the shoreline.</div>
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<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; white-space:nowrap;">The Excavation</span>
<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; white-space:nowrap;">Wildlife</span>
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The story of the museum begins in 1964, when American archaeologist '''Edward Lanning''' first identified an anomalous area of the Santa Elena Peninsula he designated the "Las Vegas complex" — a zone with evidence of pre-ceramic human occupation, meaning before pottery-making cultures. The discovery was notable but didn't immediately lead to major investigation.
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.85em; color:#5a6a7a; line-height:1.6; margin-bottom:14px;">The reserve hosts around 50 species of marine animals, coastal birds, and dry-forest wildlife. The marine mammals are the headline act, but the birdlife is substantial year-round.</div>


In 1977, '''Olaf Holm''', then director of the Anthropology Museum of the Central Bank of Ecuador, commissioned anthropologist '''Karen E. Stothert''' to formally excavate the site. Stothert and her team worked through the 1970s and 80s at OGSE-80, systematically documenting burial contexts, artifacts, ecofacts (faunal and plant remains), and settlement evidence. Her 1985 publication in ''American Antiquity'' established the Las Vegas culture's framework that researchers still use today.
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The museum opened in '''1997''', built on the excavation site itself. The Amantes burial — already famous locally — became its centrepiece. The institution was initially supported by the Banco Central del Ecuador and is now administered by the national culture ministry.
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#1d6b40; margin-bottom:3px;">Year-round</div>
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<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; margin-bottom:5px;">🦭 Sea Lion Colony — Punta Brava</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a5a6a; line-height:1.6;">A colony of South American sea lions (''Otaria flavescens'') established itself naturally at Punta Brava — a rocky outcrop accessible from La Chocolatera — during the El Niño event of 1997–98. The colony is believed to have migrated north from the Peruvian coast. At the time of writing it numbers around 20 animals, predominantly males, and is still growing. The colony is visible from a dedicated mirador approximately 150 metres from the main clifftop viewpoint. Do not attempt to descend to the rocks or approach the animals.</div>
<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; white-space:nowrap;">The Four Permanent Galleries</span>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#8b1a00; margin-bottom:3px;">Sala 1</div>
<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:5px;">El Cementerio</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.6;">The heart of the museum. The cemetery is displayed in situ — skeletons visible through protective glass in their original burial positions. Over 200 individuals from the Late Las Vegas phase (roughly 8,250–6,600 BP) rest here, the largest pre-ceramic skeletal sample from the New World. The Amantes de Sumpa burial is in this gallery, with interpretive panels explaining the burial customs of the culture. Las Vegas people buried their dead within or immediately beneath their dwellings — keeping ancestors close to the living.</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#1a4a8b; margin-bottom:3px;">Sala 2</div>
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<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:5px;">La Sala Etnográfica</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#0093c4; margin-bottom:3px;">June – September</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.6;">A survey of the peninsula's pre-Hispanic, colonial, and republican history, tracing the cultural continuity and change across thousands of years of coastal occupation. Artifacts, maps, and reconstructed objects document the transition from Las Vegas through the region's later Valdivia, Machalilla, and Chorrera cultures, then through Spanish colonisation and into modern Montubio and coastal mestizo identity.</div>
<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; margin-bottom:5px;">🐋 Humpback Whales</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a5a6a; line-height:1.6;">Humpback whales (''Megaptera novaeangliae'') migrate through the waters off La Chocolatera from June through September, travelling north from Antarctic feeding grounds to breed in warmer equatorial waters. The REMACOPSE records seven whale species in its marine area total, but humpbacks are the most visible. A dedicated whale-watching platform sits within the reserve. For guided boat excursions offshore, see [[Whale Watching (La Peninsula)|Whale Watching]].</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#1a6b40; margin-bottom:3px;">Sala 3</div>
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<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:5px;">La Sala de Navegación</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; margin-bottom:3px;">Year-round · Peak Oct–Mar</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.6;">The peninsula's identity as a seafaring place. This gallery covers the maritime traditions of the coast — from prehistoric fishing and navigation evidence through to the balsa raft voyages that connected Ecuador's coast to Mesoamerica, and the fishing cultures of the Cholo pescadores who shaped the character of the modern peninsula.</div>
<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; margin-bottom:5px;">🦅 Seabirds & Shorebirds</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a5a6a; line-height:1.6;">Over 30 species of coastal birds have been recorded at La Chocolatera and the adjacent salt pools at Mar Bravo. Resident species include the black-necked stilt (cigüeñuela) and various plovers. Year-round regulars include brown pelicans, Inca terns (gaviotines), great frigatebirds, grey herons, and various gulls. Highlights: blue-footed boobies (''Sula nebouxii'') appear seasonally and are a particular draw for visitors. Waved albatrosses have also been recorded offshore. The salt lagoons at Mar Bravo (outside the reserve proper, but adjacent) are rated the most diverse shorebird site on the Ecuadorian coast. See [[Birdwatching (La Peninsula)|Birdwatching]] for detail.</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#8b6000; margin-bottom:3px;">Sala 4</div>
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<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:5px;">La Casa Campesina</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:9px; letter-spacing:1.5px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold; color:#555555; margin-bottom:3px;">Terrestrial & Marine</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.6;">A fully reconstructed traditional coastal home from the 1930s — batea de madera (wooden washtub), petate (woven mat), cooking implements, and household objects set in period arrangement. An attached clay oven (<i>horno de barro</i>) is used for ancestral cooking workshops. This gallery anchors the museum's living cultural mission, connecting the prehistoric past to the grandparents of people alive today.</div>
<div style="font-size:1em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; margin-bottom:5px;">Other Species</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#4a5a6a; line-height:1.6;">The dry coastal scrub on the terrestrial portion holds opossums (zarigüeyas), iguanas, several lizard species, and approximately 80 plant species typical of Ecuador's arid coastal zone. Marine sea turtles nest on the beaches from October through December — the reserve's Cabaña La Tortuga interpretive station (along the Tres Cruces trail) is focused on their protection. Dolphins (seven species recorded in the marine zone) are commonly seen from the cliffs and headlands.</div>
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<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#3d1a00; white-space:nowrap;">What Makes It Worth Visiting</span>
<span style="font-size:1.25em; font-weight:bold; color:#003d5c; white-space:nowrap;">Trails & Viewpoints</span>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.85em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.7; margin-bottom:12px;">Most of Ecuador's archaeological museums display objects removed from their contexts. This one is built around things that were never moved. That distinction matters.</div>
The reserve has a set of named viewpoints connected by a well-signed path network. Distances are from the naval base checkpoint.


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! style="background:#e8f0f8; width:22%;" | Viewpoint / Trail
! style="background:#e8f0f8; width:12%;" | Distance
! style="background:#e8f0f8;" | What to expect
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| '''Mirador El Morro''' (Cerro El Morro)
| ~400 m
| The elevated viewpoint above the reserve. From here the puntilla's shape becomes apparent — you can see Mar Bravo and Chipipe behind you, and the entire cliff system ahead. Best for orientation and aerial perspective. Good starting point.
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| '''La Chocolatera''' (cliff face)
| ~2.5 km
| The main event. A jagged wall of volcanic rock where waves hit from multiple directions simultaneously. Whirlpools form in channels between boulders. The chocolate-brown sea effect is best after a heavy swell or at mid-tide. The sendero (trail) is signed and paved in sections.
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| '''El Gaviotín'''
| Along the main trail
| Named for the tern species that roost here in the warmer months. A secondary clifftop lookout point, good for seabird observation.
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| '''El Faro''' (Lighthouse)
| Near La Puntilla
| The working lighthouse at the extreme tip of the peninsula — the geographic reference point for Ecuador's maritime territory. The trail to El Faro is illuminated (the only lit section), making late-afternoon visits possible before the close time. Photo stop.
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| '''La Puntilla'''
| At the tip
| The westernmost point itself. The continent ends here. The Pacific is in all directions you can face. Reference point for maritime measurements.
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| '''Mirador Punta Brava'''
<div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:0.88em; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:4px;">🦴 In-situ archaeology</div>
| ~150 m from main clifftop
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.55;">The burials are where they were found. You are standing on the settlement itself, looking down at the original cemetery floor.</div>
| Elevated view of the sea lion colony on the rocks below. Closest safe approach to the animals.
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<div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:0.88em; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:4px;">🌽 Earliest farmers in America</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.55;">Evidence of primitive maize cultivation from OGSE-80 predates 8,000 years ago — making Las Vegas people among the first recorded cultivators on the continent.</div>
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| '''Camino de las Tres Cruces'''
<div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:0.88em; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:4px;">🧑‍🤝‍🧑 The human scale</div>
| 2.5 km (trail)
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.55;">This isn't a grand imperial culture or a pyramid-building civilisation. The Amantes were ordinary people, 20–25 years old, buried with care by people who knew them. That simplicity hits differently than monuments.</div>
| A coastal walking trail linking La Chocolatera to La Lobería on the other side of the puntilla. Passes through ecologically sensitive beach (sea turtle nesting zone) and the Cabaña La Tortuga interpretation station. Can also be cycled. Allows access to La Lobería (the surf break) from within the reserve.
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<div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:0.88em; color:#3d1a00; margin-bottom:4px;">🏺 Living connection</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; color:#5a4a3a; line-height:1.55;">The museum actively links ancient and contemporary culture: cooking workshops, artisan traditions, and community programming connect modern Santaelenenses to the people who lived on this land first.</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#6a6a6a; line-height:1.6; margin-top:10px;">The full Tres Cruces trail to La Lobería (and by extension the FAE surf break) takes 30–45 minutes on foot. Water dispensers are available along the route — bring a bottle to refill. The full reserve walk covering all viewpoints takes approximately 1.5–2 hours at a relaxed pace.</div>




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The museum is located in the '''Barrio Amantes de Sumpa''', at the corner of Calle El Universo and Avenida Rafael Balseca, roughly between '''Santa Elena''' and '''La Libertad''' two blocks from the main road, opposite the Federación de Comunas building.
The only access is through the '''Base Naval de Salinas checkpoint''', at the south end of Playa Chipipe. Present your cédula or passport at the gate your ID may be retained while you are inside the base, as is standard practice at military installations in Ecuador. Foreign visitors must have their passport.


From central Santa Elena it is walkable (10–15 minutes west along Av. Rafael Balseca). From Salinas, take any bus or taxi toward La Libertad and ask to be dropped at the museum — the ride takes about 10–15 minutes. A taxi from the Santa Elena bus terminal costs approximately $2–3.
From there, La Chocolatera is 2.5 km inside the base.


From Guayaquil, the museum is about 2 hours by bus or car via the E-40; ask your driver to stop at Santa Elena rather than continuing to Salinas.
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See '''[[Understanding Public Transportation in La Peninsula|Public Transportation]]''' and '''[[Taxis and Taxi Apps|Taxis & Apps]]''' for local route details.
 
 
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| '''Hours'''
| Tue–Sat: 08h30–17h00 (last entry 16h30). Confirm weekend hours with the museum directly as scheduling can vary.
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| '''Entry'''
| Free. No ticket required.
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| '''Guided tours'''
| On-site staff (including lead curator Beatriz Lindao) provide guided visits. Tours run approximately 1 hour. Spanish; limited English. Arrange on arrival.
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| '''Photography'''
| Permitted. No direct flash on the cemetery vitrine. Respect signage.
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| '''Contact'''
| (04) 2941020 · blindao.maac@culturaypatrimonio.gob.ec
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| '''Address'''
| Barrio Amantes de Sumpa, Calle El Universo y Av. Rafael Balseca, Santa Elena
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| '''Parking'''
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| On-site vehicle parking available.
<div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:0.88em; color:#003d5c; margin-bottom:4px;">🚕 Taxi</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; color:#4a5a6a; line-height:1.55;">Most practical. Salinas taxis charge $6–9 for a trip to La Chocolatera including a 30-minute wait. Negotiate before entering. Ask the driver to take you to multiple viewpoints (El Morro, La Chocolatera, El Faro, Punta Brava) — a round tour inside the base usually adds $2–3.</div>
| '''Time needed'''
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| 60–90 minutes for a comfortable visit including the guided tour.
<div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:0.88em; color:#003d5c; margin-bottom:4px;">🚶 On foot</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; color:#4a5a6a; line-height:1.55;">Possible from Salinas — about 20 minutes to the checkpoint from central Salinas, then 2.5 km inside to La Chocolatera itself. Manageable in cooler months or early morning; exhausting in dry-season heat. The trails inside are paved in sections.</div>
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<div style="font-weight:bold; font-size:0.88em; color:#003d5c; margin-bottom:4px;">🚲 Bicycle</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.8em; color:#4a5a6a; line-height:1.55;">The roads inside the naval base are paved and mostly quiet. Cycling to La Chocolatera is a popular option. The Tres Cruces trail to La Lobería is also bikeable. Rentals available in central Salinas.</div>
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<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.82em; color:#8a6a3a; font-style:italic; margin-top:10px;">Hours and contact details are community-verified but may change. Check the museum's official social channels or call ahead for public holidays.</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#7a6a3a; background:#fffce8; border:1px solid #e0d898; border-radius:5px; padding:10px 13px; margin-top:10px; line-height:1.6;">⚠ <b>Taxi return tip:</b> Taxis cannot wait at some points inside the base and may be difficult to find for the return journey. Agree on a round-trip or a pickup time before your driver leaves. Some visitors have found themselves stranded — see [[Taxis and Taxi Apps|Taxis & Apps]] for reliable contact numbers.</div>




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* '''Go early in the day.''' The museum is not air-conditioned; mornings are significantly cooler and more comfortable, especially in the wet season.
* '''Bring your ID without fail.''' The checkpoint is non-negotiable. Ecuadorian cédula or foreign passport. No ID means no entry.
* '''Book a guided visit.''' The interpretive panels are in Spanish, and the burial context loses a lot without explanation. The guides are genuinely knowledgeable and passionate about the site.
* '''Go early.''' The site can fill on weekends and national holidays (Semana Santa, Carnaval, school vacation weeks). Mornings are cooler and the light on the cliffs is better for photography.
* '''Combine with Salinas.''' The museum is a natural half-day addition to a beach day — leave Salinas mid-morning, visit the museum, return for the afternoon.
* '''Check closing time.''' The base closes in the mid-to-late afternoon — some sources say 15:00, others 17:00. Confirm on arrival and plan your time accordingly. Do not be inside after close.
* '''Bring water.''' The surrounding neighbourhood has few cafes or services immediately at hand.
* '''Come in whale season for the full experience.''' June–September adds a dimension that no other time of year can match. Even without a boat tour, the headland viewpoints give good sightlines to the migratory corridor.
* '''Take the Casa Campesina seriously.''' It's easy to rush through to get to the cemetery — but the 1930s household reconstruction is quietly excellent and grounding.
* '''Combine with La Lobería / FAE.''' The Tres Cruces trail connects La Chocolatera to the surf break on the other side of the puntilla. If you are a surfer or want to see La Lobería, this is the scenic way in.
* '''Ask about cooking workshops.''' The ancestral cooking programme using the clay oven is run periodically; staff can advise on scheduled sessions.
* '''The Mar Bravo salt lagoons are just outside the reserve''' — ask a local or taxi driver to include them on a birding visit. They hold extraordinary shorebird diversity and are often overlooked.
* '''Take water.''' Dispensers on the trail help but bring a bottle from Salinas. There are snack vendors and a small artisan market inside the reserve near the main viewpoints.
* '''Swell day = chocolate day.''' The colour effect is most dramatic after several days of strong swell. If conditions have been rough on the open Pacific, the timing is ideal.




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'''[[Culture & History (La Peninsula)|Culture & History]]'''
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a6a3a; margin-top:2px;">Peninsula overview</div>
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'''[[Santa Elena (town)|Santa Elena Town Guide]]'''
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a6a3a; margin-top:2px;">What else is in town</div>
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'''[[Whale Watching (La Peninsula)|Whale Watching]]'''
'''[[Whale Watching (La Peninsula)|Whale Watching]]'''
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a6a3a; margin-top:2px;">Jun–Sep activity pairing</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a8a8a; margin-top:2px;">Jun–Sep · Boat tours from Salinas</div>
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'''[[Surfing (La Peninsula)|Surfing La Península]]'''
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'''[[Birdwatching (La Peninsula)|Birdwatching]]'''
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'''[[Snorkeling (La Peninsula)|Snorkeling & Diving]]'''
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a8a8a; margin-top:2px;">Tropical fish around the headlands</div>
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'''[[Museo Amantes de Sumpa|Museo Los Amantes de Sumpa]]'''
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a8a8a; margin-top:2px;">Half-day pairing in Santa Elena</div>
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'''[[Portal:Ruta del Spondylus|Ruta del Spondylus]]'''
'''[[Portal:Ruta del Spondylus|Ruta del Spondylus]]'''
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a6a3a; margin-top:2px;">Cultural route context</div>
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a8a8a; margin-top:2px;">Regional coastal route context</div>
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'''[[Operators Directory|Tour Operators]]'''
<div style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.76em; color:#8a6a3a; margin-top:2px;">Half-day tour options</div>
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'''[[Understanding Public Transportation in La Peninsula|Getting Around]]'''
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<span style="color:#0093c4; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">📍</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Barrio Amantes de Sumpa, Calle El Universo y Av. Rafael Balseca, Santa Elena</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.5;">Base Naval de Salinas, west end of Playa Chipipe, Salinas</span>
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<span style="color:#0093c4; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🕘</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Tue–Sat 08h30–17h00<br><span style="color:#8a6a3a; font-size:0.9em;">(last entry 16h30)</span></span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.5;">Open daily. Last entry ~15h00–17h00 (confirm at gate — hours vary). Must be out before close.</span>
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<span style="color:#8b5e00; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🎟</span>
<span style="color:#0093c4; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🎟</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;"><b>Free</b> — no ticket required</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.5;"><b>Free.</b> No entry fee.</span>
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<span style="color:#8b5e00; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🕐</span>
<span style="color:#0093c4; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🪪</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">~60–90 min recommended</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.5;"><b>ID required.</b> Cédula (Ecuadorians) or passport (foreigners). Retained at checkpoint while inside.</span>
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<span style="color:#8b5e00; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🗣</span>
<span style="color:#0093c4; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🚕</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Guided tours available on-site (primarily Spanish)</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.5;">Taxi from Salinas: $6–9 incl. wait. Arrange return before driver leaves.</span>
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<span style="color:#0093c4; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🕐</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.5;">1.5–2 hrs for full walk. 45 min minimum for main cliffs + sea lions.</span>
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<span style="color:#8b5e00; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">📞</span>
<span style="color:#0093c4; flex-shrink:0; width:20px; text-align:center;">🏊</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">(04) 2941020</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.5;"><b>No swimming.</b> Strong rips, shore break, and rocky seabed throughout. Observation only.</span>
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<div style="background:#003d5c; color:#ffffff; padding:9px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:10px; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold;">Wildlife Calendar</div>
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<div style="display:flex; gap:10px; padding:7px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e8eef5; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; align-items:flex-start;">
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; min-width:68px; flex-shrink:0; font-family:Georgia,serif;">~8,500 BC</span>
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#0093c4; min-width:64px; flex-shrink:0;">Jan–May</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">First human occupation of the OGSE-80 site. Earliest Las Vegas phase.</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.4;">Sea lions year-round. Seabirds active. Surf season — the chocolate effect is at its best after large NW swells.</span>
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<div style="display:flex; gap:10px; padding:7px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e8eef5; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; align-items:flex-start;">
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; min-width:68px; flex-shrink:0; font-family:Georgia,serif;">~7,000 BC</span>
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#0093c4; min-width:64px; flex-shrink:0;">Jun–Sep</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Approximate date of the Amantes de Sumpa double burial.</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.4;"><b>Humpback whale season.</b> Peak wildlife months. Sea lions, dolphins, blue-footed boobies, whale watching offshore.</span>
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<div style="display:flex; gap:10px; padding:7px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e8eef5; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; align-items:flex-start;">
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; min-width:68px; flex-shrink:0; font-family:Georgia,serif;">~6,600 BC</span>
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#0093c4; min-width:64px; flex-shrink:0;">Oct–Dec</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">End of Las Vegas occupation at the site. Transition to later coastal cultures.</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.4;"><b>Sea turtle nesting season.</b> Nesting activity on reserve beaches. Cabaña La Tortuga most active. Transition into surf season.</span>
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<div style="display:flex; gap:10px; padding:7px 0; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; align-items:flex-start;">
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; min-width:68px; flex-shrink:0; font-family:Georgia,serif;">1964</span>
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#0093c4; min-width:64px; flex-shrink:0;">Year-round</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Edward Lanning identifies the Las Vegas complex on the Santa Elena Peninsula.</span>
<span style="color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.4;">Sea lions, pelicans, frigatebirds, herons, terns, iguanas. The cliffs and current always present.</span>
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</div>
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; min-width:68px; flex-shrink:0; font-family:Georgia,serif;">1977</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Karen E. Stothert begins systematic excavation at OGSE-80, commissioned by Olaf Holm.</span>
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<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; min-width:68px; flex-shrink:0; font-family:Georgia,serif;">1985</span>
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Stothert's landmark article in <i>American Antiquity</i> establishes Las Vegas as a formally defined culture.</span>
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<!-- ── SIDEBAR: THE CURRENT COLLISION ── -->
<span style="font-weight:bold; color:#8b5e00; min-width:68px; flex-shrink:0; font-family:Georgia,serif;">1997</span>
<div style="border:1px solid #d0dce8; border-radius:5px; overflow:hidden; margin-bottom:16px;">
<span style="color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.5;">Museo Los Amantes de Sumpa opens to the public on the excavation site.</span>
<div style="background:#003d5c; color:#ffffff; padding:9px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:10px; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold;">🌊 The Current Collision</div>
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<div style="padding:12px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.83em; color:#2a3a4a; line-height:1.65;">
 
<div style="margin-bottom:10px; padding-bottom:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #e8eef5;"><b>Humboldt Current</b> — Cold, nutrient-rich upwelling from the south. Responsible for Ecuador's coastal fisheries productivity and the cool water temperatures on the south-facing coast.</div>
 
<div style="margin-bottom:10px; padding-bottom:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #e8eef5;"><b>Equatorial Current</b> — Warm surface water flowing west from the north. Creates the temperature gradient that makes this convergence zone so biologically productive.</div>
 
<div>Where they meet at La Puntilla, the energy drives sediment up from the seabed, creating the brown discolouration. This same nutrient mixing is why the waters around La Chocolatera support such dense marine life — and why the whales come.</div>


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<div style="background:#7a0000; color:#ffffff; padding:9px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:10px; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold;">⚠ Safety</div>
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<div style="padding:12px 14px;">


<div style="margin-bottom:10px; padding-bottom:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #f0e0b0;">The Las Vegas culture is the <b>only known paleo-Indian coastal settlement on the Ecuadorian coast</b>. OGSE-80 is its type site — the reference point against which all other Early Holocene coastal occupations in this region are measured.</div>
<div style="display:flex; align-items:flex-start; gap:8px; padding:6px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e8eef5; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.82em;">
<span style="font-size:13px; flex-shrink:0;">⚠</span>
<span style="color:#4a2a2a; line-height:1.5;"><b>No swimming anywhere.</b> Rips, shore dump, submerged rocks, and unpredictable wave direction make the entire La Chocolatera coast dangerous for swimmers. Observation only.</span>
</div>


<div style="margin-bottom:10px; padding-bottom:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #f0e0b0;">The site's evidence of <b>early plant cultivation</b> (bottle gourd and primitive maize before 8,000 BP) places coastal Ecuador among the world's primary centres of early agriculture — alongside Mesopotamia, China, and Mesoamerica.</div>
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<span style="font-size:13px; flex-shrink:0;">⚠</span>
<span style="color:#4a2a2a; line-height:1.5;"><b>Stay behind barriers.</b> The clifftop viewpoints have fencing. Do not cross it. Wave surges over the rocks can be sudden and powerful.</span>
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<span style="font-size:13px; flex-shrink:0;">⚠</span>
<span style="color:#4a2a2a; line-height:1.5;"><b>Do not approach sea lions.</b> Despite their relaxed appearance, sea lions are large wild animals. Maintain distance. No contact.</span>
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<span style="font-size:13px; flex-shrink:0;">☀</span>
<span style="color:#4a2a2a; line-height:1.5;"><b>Equatorial sun.</b> Shade is limited on the trail. SPF 50+, hat, and water are essential — especially mid-day.</span>
</div>


<div>The 200+ burials represent <b>the largest pre-ceramic skeletal sample from the New World</b> at the time of excavation, providing an irreplaceable record of early coastal population health, diet, and mortuary practices.</div>
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<span style="font-size:13px; flex-shrink:0;">🚑</span>
<span style="color:#4a2a2a; line-height:1.5;">Emergency: <b>911</b>. Nearest full hospital: [[Medical Services|La Libertad]]. Security guards are present inside the reserve.</span>
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<div style="background:#1d6b40; color:#ffffff; padding:9px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:10px; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold;">🏗 Help Build This Page</div>
<div style="background:#1d6b40; color:#ffffff; padding:9px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:10px; letter-spacing:2px; text-transform:uppercase; font-weight:bold;">🏗 Help Build This Page</div>
<div style="padding:12px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.86em; color:#3d2a00; line-height:1.6;">
<div style="padding:12px 14px; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:0.86em; color:#2a4a3a; line-height:1.6;">
Have visited recently? Know updated hours or programmes?
Know current opening hours? Seen something new in the reserve? Add it.
* [[Special:WantedPages|Articles most needed]]
* [[Special:Upload|Upload a photo]]
* [[Special:Upload|Upload a photo of the museum]]
* [[Operators Directory|Add a whale-watch operator]]
* [[Wiki Guidelines|Contribution guidelines]]
* [[Wiki Guidelines|Contribution guidelines]]
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[[Category:Culture & History]]
[[Category:Outdoor Activities]]
[[Category:Museums]]
[[Category:Natural Sites]]
[[Category:Santa Elena]]
[[Category:Wildlife & Nature]]
[[Category:Archaeology]]
[[Category:Salinas]]
[[Category:Las Vegas Culture]]
[[Category:Marine Reserve]]
[[Category:Heritage Sites]]
[[Category:Whale Watching]]
[[Category:Birdwatching]]

Revision as of 21:52, 23 May 2026


EcuaWiki › The Peninsula › Outdoor Activities › Natural Sites
La Chocolatera
Puntilla de Santa Elena
The westernmost tip of Ecuador's continental coast. Where two ocean currents collide, waves turn chocolate-brown, sea lions sleep on sun-warmed rocks, and humpback whales surface just offshore.
52,231 ha
Marine reserve area
~50
Marine & bird species
Gratuito
Free entry
ID req.
Military base checkpoint



"The waves don't just crash here — they collide from two directions at once. The result is a churning, frothing brown cauldron at the tip of the continent, with rainbows forming in the spray and sea lions watching from the rocks like they own the place. They do."

La Chocolatera is the most westerly point of Ecuador's continental coastline — the physical tip of the Santa Elena Peninsula, where the Pacific Ocean meets the peninsula's cliffs and the land runs out. It sits within the Reserva de Producción Faunística Marino Costero Puntilla de Santa Elena (REMACOPSE), a protected marine and coastal area established in 2008, and is accessed through the Base Naval de Salinas, which means you need ID to get in.

Up to 300,000 visitors a year make the trip. Most come for the dramatic coastline; many come for the sea lion colony at Punta Brava; and from June to September, anyone who looks offshore long enough will likely spot humpback whales.

It is free, it is genuinely spectacular, and it is one of the few places on the peninsula where the sheer force of the Pacific becomes physical — something you feel in your chest when a wave hits the cliff face at full speed.


Why "La Chocolatera"?

The name comes from the colour of the water. At the tip of the puntilla, two ocean currents converge: the cold Humboldt Current sweeping up from the south, and the warmer Equatorial Current pushing in from the north. When their combined energy drives waves against the rocky headland, the churning water lifts dark volcanic sand from the seabed. The result — particularly after a large swell — is a frothy, dark-brown sea that genuinely resembles a giant bowl of chocolate. Add spray catching the equatorial sun and you get rainbows in the foam.

The name stuck. The neighbourhood around the naval base checkpoint uses it. The whole protected area is informally called La Chocolatera by everyone on the peninsula.


Geography & Significance

La Chocolatera marks the western extreme of Ecuador's continental territory. It is also the reference point from which Ecuador measures its maritime boundary into the Pacific — a fact that gives it quiet but real geopolitical weight. The tip is visible as a distinct protrusion on satellite imagery; some sources describe it as visible from space.

The puntilla separates two distinct water bodies: the open Bahía de Santa Elena to the north, and the Golfo de Guayaquil to the south. This division is what drives the current collision that names the place.

The reserve
The REMACOPSE protects 52,231 hectares of marine habitat plus 203 hectares of terrestrial coast — cliffs, rocky shore, black-sand beach, and dry coastal scrub. Established in 2008, it is one of the few protected areas on Ecuador's central coast focused on marine productivity as well as wildlife.
The beach
La Chocolatera's beach itself is short (under a kilometre), narrow (around 30 metres wide), and composed of dark, medium-grained volcanic sand. It is windswept, high-surf, and unsuitable for swimming — but striking. Access is on foot along a signed path from the main mirador.


Wildlife

The reserve hosts around 50 species of marine animals, coastal birds, and dry-forest wildlife. The marine mammals are the headline act, but the birdlife is substantial year-round.
Year-round
🦭 Sea Lion Colony — Punta Brava
A colony of South American sea lions (Otaria flavescens) established itself naturally at Punta Brava — a rocky outcrop accessible from La Chocolatera — during the El Niño event of 1997–98. The colony is believed to have migrated north from the Peruvian coast. At the time of writing it numbers around 20 animals, predominantly males, and is still growing. The colony is visible from a dedicated mirador approximately 150 metres from the main clifftop viewpoint. Do not attempt to descend to the rocks or approach the animals.
June – September
🐋 Humpback Whales
Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) migrate through the waters off La Chocolatera from June through September, travelling north from Antarctic feeding grounds to breed in warmer equatorial waters. The REMACOPSE records seven whale species in its marine area total, but humpbacks are the most visible. A dedicated whale-watching platform sits within the reserve. For guided boat excursions offshore, see Whale Watching.
Year-round · Peak Oct–Mar
🦅 Seabirds & Shorebirds
Over 30 species of coastal birds have been recorded at La Chocolatera and the adjacent salt pools at Mar Bravo. Resident species include the black-necked stilt (cigüeñuela) and various plovers. Year-round regulars include brown pelicans, Inca terns (gaviotines), great frigatebirds, grey herons, and various gulls. Highlights: blue-footed boobies (Sula nebouxii) appear seasonally and are a particular draw for visitors. Waved albatrosses have also been recorded offshore. The salt lagoons at Mar Bravo (outside the reserve proper, but adjacent) are rated the most diverse shorebird site on the Ecuadorian coast. See Birdwatching for detail.
Terrestrial & Marine
Other Species
The dry coastal scrub on the terrestrial portion holds opossums (zarigüeyas), iguanas, several lizard species, and approximately 80 plant species typical of Ecuador's arid coastal zone. Marine sea turtles nest on the beaches from October through December — the reserve's Cabaña La Tortuga interpretive station (along the Tres Cruces trail) is focused on their protection. Dolphins (seven species recorded in the marine zone) are commonly seen from the cliffs and headlands.


Trails & Viewpoints

The reserve has a set of named viewpoints connected by a well-signed path network. Distances are from the naval base checkpoint.

Viewpoint / Trail Distance What to expect
Mirador El Morro (Cerro El Morro) ~400 m The elevated viewpoint above the reserve. From here the puntilla's shape becomes apparent — you can see Mar Bravo and Chipipe behind you, and the entire cliff system ahead. Best for orientation and aerial perspective. Good starting point.
La Chocolatera (cliff face) ~2.5 km The main event. A jagged wall of volcanic rock where waves hit from multiple directions simultaneously. Whirlpools form in channels between boulders. The chocolate-brown sea effect is best after a heavy swell or at mid-tide. The sendero (trail) is signed and paved in sections.
El Gaviotín Along the main trail Named for the tern species that roost here in the warmer months. A secondary clifftop lookout point, good for seabird observation.
El Faro (Lighthouse) Near La Puntilla The working lighthouse at the extreme tip of the peninsula — the geographic reference point for Ecuador's maritime territory. The trail to El Faro is illuminated (the only lit section), making late-afternoon visits possible before the close time. Photo stop.
La Puntilla At the tip The westernmost point itself. The continent ends here. The Pacific is in all directions you can face. Reference point for maritime measurements.
Mirador Punta Brava ~150 m from main clifftop Elevated view of the sea lion colony on the rocks below. Closest safe approach to the animals.
Camino de las Tres Cruces 2.5 km (trail) A coastal walking trail linking La Chocolatera to La Lobería on the other side of the puntilla. Passes through ecologically sensitive beach (sea turtle nesting zone) and the Cabaña La Tortuga interpretation station. Can also be cycled. Allows access to La Lobería (the surf break) from within the reserve.
The full Tres Cruces trail to La Lobería (and by extension the FAE surf break) takes 30–45 minutes on foot. Water dispensers are available along the route — bring a bottle to refill. The full reserve walk covering all viewpoints takes approximately 1.5–2 hours at a relaxed pace.


Getting There

The only access is through the Base Naval de Salinas checkpoint, at the south end of Playa Chipipe. Present your cédula or passport at the gate — your ID may be retained while you are inside the base, as is standard practice at military installations in Ecuador. Foreign visitors must have their passport.

From there, La Chocolatera is 2.5 km inside the base.

🚕 Taxi
Most practical. Salinas taxis charge $6–9 for a trip to La Chocolatera including a 30-minute wait. Negotiate before entering. Ask the driver to take you to multiple viewpoints (El Morro, La Chocolatera, El Faro, Punta Brava) — a round tour inside the base usually adds $2–3.
🚶 On foot
Possible from Salinas — about 20 minutes to the checkpoint from central Salinas, then 2.5 km inside to La Chocolatera itself. Manageable in cooler months or early morning; exhausting in dry-season heat. The trails inside are paved in sections.
🚲 Bicycle
The roads inside the naval base are paved and mostly quiet. Cycling to La Chocolatera is a popular option. The Tres Cruces trail to La Lobería is also bikeable. Rentals available in central Salinas.
Taxi return tip: Taxis cannot wait at some points inside the base and may be difficult to find for the return journey. Agree on a round-trip or a pickup time before your driver leaves. Some visitors have found themselves stranded — see Taxis & Apps for reliable contact numbers.


Visitor Tips

  • Bring your ID without fail. The checkpoint is non-negotiable. Ecuadorian cédula or foreign passport. No ID means no entry.
  • Go early. The site can fill on weekends and national holidays (Semana Santa, Carnaval, school vacation weeks). Mornings are cooler and the light on the cliffs is better for photography.
  • Check closing time. The base closes in the mid-to-late afternoon — some sources say 15:00, others 17:00. Confirm on arrival and plan your time accordingly. Do not be inside after close.
  • Come in whale season for the full experience. June–September adds a dimension that no other time of year can match. Even without a boat tour, the headland viewpoints give good sightlines to the migratory corridor.
  • Combine with La Lobería / FAE. The Tres Cruces trail connects La Chocolatera to the surf break on the other side of the puntilla. If you are a surfer or want to see La Lobería, this is the scenic way in.
  • The Mar Bravo salt lagoons are just outside the reserve — ask a local or taxi driver to include them on a birding visit. They hold extraordinary shorebird diversity and are often overlooked.
  • Take water. Dispensers on the trail help but bring a bottle from Salinas. There are snack vendors and a small artisan market inside the reserve near the main viewpoints.
  • Swell day = chocolate day. The colour effect is most dramatic after several days of strong swell. If conditions have been rough on the open Pacific, the timing is ideal.


Related Activities

Whale Watching

Jun–Sep · Boat tours from Salinas

Surfing La Península

La Lobería / FAE via Tres Cruces

Birdwatching

Mar Bravo salt lagoons

Snorkeling & Diving

Tropical fish around the headlands

Museo Los Amantes de Sumpa

Half-day pairing in Santa Elena

Ruta del Spondylus

Regional coastal route context



At a Glance

📍 Base Naval de Salinas, west end of Playa Chipipe, Salinas

🕘 Open daily. Last entry ~15h00–17h00 (confirm at gate — hours vary). Must be out before close.

🎟 Free. No entry fee.

🪪 ID required. Cédula (Ecuadorians) or passport (foreigners). Retained at checkpoint while inside.

🚕 Taxi from Salinas: $6–9 incl. wait. Arrange return before driver leaves.

🕐 1.5–2 hrs for full walk. 45 min minimum for main cliffs + sea lions.

🏊 No swimming. Strong rips, shore break, and rocky seabed throughout. Observation only.


Wildlife Calendar

Jan–May Sea lions year-round. Seabirds active. Surf season — the chocolate effect is at its best after large NW swells.

Jun–Sep Humpback whale season. Peak wildlife months. Sea lions, dolphins, blue-footed boobies, whale watching offshore.

Oct–Dec Sea turtle nesting season. Nesting activity on reserve beaches. Cabaña La Tortuga most active. Transition into surf season.

Year-round Sea lions, pelicans, frigatebirds, herons, terns, iguanas. The cliffs and current always present.


🌊 The Current Collision
Humboldt Current — Cold, nutrient-rich upwelling from the south. Responsible for Ecuador's coastal fisheries productivity and the cool water temperatures on the south-facing coast.
Equatorial Current — Warm surface water flowing west from the north. Creates the temperature gradient that makes this convergence zone so biologically productive.
Where they meet at La Puntilla, the energy drives sediment up from the seabed, creating the brown discolouration. This same nutrient mixing is why the waters around La Chocolatera support such dense marine life — and why the whales come.


⚠ Safety

No swimming anywhere. Rips, shore dump, submerged rocks, and unpredictable wave direction make the entire La Chocolatera coast dangerous for swimmers. Observation only.

Stay behind barriers. The clifftop viewpoints have fencing. Do not cross it. Wave surges over the rocks can be sudden and powerful.

Do not approach sea lions. Despite their relaxed appearance, sea lions are large wild animals. Maintain distance. No contact.

Equatorial sun. Shade is limited on the trail. SPF 50+, hat, and water are essential — especially mid-day.

🚑 Emergency: 911. Nearest full hospital: La Libertad. Security guards are present inside the reserve.


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