Heritage on the Wire
Across the Wire
December 16, 2011
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In the 1920s, when commercial planes began flying across the Nazca Desert in southern Peru, passengers reported seeing “primitive landing strips” on the ground below. Closer studies by anthropologists revealed a series of ancient geoglyphs spanning some 50 miles of arid plateau, ranging in complexity from simple lines to stylized monkeys, spiders, hummingbirds, fish, sharks, orcas, llamas and lizards.
read more Tags: Nazca Lines, Peru, South America, UNESCO, Unsustainable Tourism
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