This carving on the Parasas Peninsula in Peru very clearly seems to be a candelabra. That's concerning, because the ancient Incans didn't have much use for candelabras, and shouldn't even have known what one looked like. They weren't around 2200 years ago.
Why, then, did the Incans make a six-hundred-foot high carving of a candelabra in the Andes? The answer is that they might not have. This could be intended as a depiction of a trident belonging to Viracocha, who created the world according to Incan lore.