The discipline that studies the knowledge and beliefs that ancient peoples and civilizations had about the sky, and that they left evidenced in archaeological elements is called Archaeoastronomy. The Technology in Topography program, now called Technology in Topographic Surveys of the District University, has generated an academic space of an intrinsic type called Archaeoastronomy, where it is shown, analyzed, investigated on various sites where archaeological remains lie, and their possible relationship with the astronomical knowledge of the communities that inhabited them and their cosmovision’s. Also, the Seedbed of Research in Archaeoastronomy, has generated several thesis projects. Thus, with terrestrial laser scanner technology, topographic surveys, geodetic positioning, 3D photographs, Drones, cartography, solar clock design, and chroniclers’ readings, data and documentation have been taken to solve and propose hypotheses in the area. In the same way, sites where the communities made observations of solstices and equinoxes have been visited and recovered.