Wichqana was active from around 1200-800 BC during the Kishka Pata Period and was a ceremonial center on the central highlands of Peru, on the Ayacucho Valley.
The ceremonial center also included some Chavinoid features which shows that the Wichqana people were practicing some form of the Chavionoid culture.
[4] The main source of trade and production for the Wichqana people included agriculture (potatoes, ocas, ullucus, maca, etc.)
Along with agriculture and herding, hunting was also a large part of the economy which included common animals such as deer, rodents, and birds.
It had been confirmed that most of the trading was done along the northern part of the territory during the earlier period, then later moving more toward the coastal area during the later years.