Just two hours from ICA, 50 square km of desert floor were covered
centuries ago by vast drawings, figures of mammals, insects and deities.
The Nazca Lines, discovered in 1927, are the most extraordinary legacy
left by a culture that flourished in 300 BC. The lines are a series of
complex designs, some up to 300 meters long which can only be seen in
their true dimension from the sky, from an altitude of at least 1,500 feet. |

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| The Nazca
culture is not believed to have been capable of manned flight. But the
question remains as to how they crafted the drawings, what technology they
used and what purpose the lines served. Theories abound regarding these
mysterious etchings, ranging from landing strips for aliens to a giant
seismograph. The most probable theory is that of Marķa Reiche, a German
researcher who dedicated her life to studying the lines. Ms Reiche
believed that the lines were part of a vast astronomic calendar whose
figures marked different solar phases. Ms Reiche, affectionately nicknamed
the Angel of the Plains by the local inhabitants, was the first to
discover the ancient technique of digging into the tough and dry desert
floor and covering the track with stones brought from distant sites. The
component of natural plaster existing in the area helped to preserve for
thousands of years the drawings: the hummingbird, the spider, the condor
and the monkey, among the more than 30 figures etched into the plain.
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The
Nazca Plains (there are four areas in total: Palpa, Ingenio, Nazca and
Socos) lie in the department of Ica, some 460 km south of Lima. Like an
embroidery of the gods, the lines that decorate the desert floor have been
declared a Mankind Heritage Site by UNESCO, and the ancient mystery of the
figures still waits to be unraveled.
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