News
12h
The Daily Galaxy on MSN‘They’re Selling Out Our Ancestors’: Peru Chooses Gold Over History, and Archaeologists Are FuriousThe Peruvian government has redrawn the borders of the archaeological reserve protecting the ancient Nazca Lines, a decision ...
2d
Smithsonian Magazine on MSNNearly Half of the Protected Land Around the Nazca Lines of Peru Is Now Open to MinersBut now, the government of Peru has slashed the borders of the protected archaeological park that encompasses the Nazca Lines ...
Peru’s decision to shrink its archeological park home to the famous Nazca Lines by around 42% — an area roughly the size of 1 ...
Peru has acknowledged that miners operating in an area once protected around the famed Nazca Lines can now begin the process ...
2d
Mining Technology on MSNNazca Lines’ protected area reduction in Peru could expose site to mining damageAccording to Peru's Culture Ministry, the decision was based on studies that more accurately identified areas of “real ...
An aerial view of a cat drawing etched on soil that is part of the geoglyphs known as the Nazca Lines in the desert of Nazca, ...
A decision of Peru's ministry of culture to reduce the size of the Nazca Lines reserve by more than 40 percent is prompting ...
Peru's government reduced the protected area around the Nazca Lines, sparking concerns over vulnerability to informal mining.
"The main threats to the Nazca Lines are informal mining operations in the surroundings and even within the protected area," Pieter Van Dalen, head of Peru's archaeologists' association, told Reuters.
Peru's Ministry of Mines on Tuesday said that the government's decision to reduce the boundaries of the protected Nazca Lines ...
Supported by By Franz Lidz Gouged into a barren stretch of pampa in southern Peru, the Nazca Lines are one of archaeology’s most perplexing mysteries. On the floor of the coastal desert ...
Peru’s decision to shrink its archeological park home to the famous Nazca Lines by around 42% — an area roughly the size of 1,400 soccer fields — has sparked alarm among conservationists ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results