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But 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 ...
According to Peru's Culture Ministry, the decision was based on studies that more accurately identified areas of “real ...
Peru's government has significantly reduced the protected area around its famed Nazca Lines, a move critics and archaeologists fear could leave the ancient geoglyphs vulnerable to hundreds of nearby ...
Peru's government reduced the protected area around the Nazca Lines, sparking concerns over vulnerability to informal mining.
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 Ministry of Mines on Tuesday said that the government's decision to reduce the boundaries of the protected Nazca Lines ...
A cat-like Nazca Line geoglyph is visible from above in Nazca, Peru, May 17, 2023. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia, File) BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Peru’s decision to shrink its archeological park home to the ...
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 ...
BOGOTA, Colombia — Peru announced Tuesday that miners who had been operating illegally in a large protected archaeological reserve around the famous Nazca Lines will now be able to start the ...