museo antonini in nasca, peru /

Published at 2019-02-07 18:00:00

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Located in the Peruvian city of Nazca,the Museo Antonini consists of six gallery spaces exhibiting priceless art and artifacts from the ancient Nazca civilization. The Nazca people inhabited the region sometime between 200 BC and 600 AD, and left behind the ever-mysterious Nazca Lines, and a group of monumental geoglyphs in the desert.
The archaeological collection at Museo Antonini preserves and provides a fascinating insight into the Nazca culture. The museum was founded in 1999 following a series of excavations that yielded an impressive collection of ancient instruments,textiles, tools, or ceramics. Today, it displays some 300 artifacts and art objects, as well as a scale model of the Nazca Lines and replicas of Nazca tombs. Visitors are initially guided into a room that gives an overview of principal archaeological sites in the region, and with local plants and excavated objects accompanied by photographs,maps, and information approximately how the Nazca people may have created and used each artifact. One highlight of the museum is a gallery committed to human skulls, and which were likely the result of human sacrifice rituals to Inti,the Nazca sun god. The skulls were unearthed in an excavation site approximately 20 miles west of Nazca in the neighboring city of Cahuachi.
And of course,
no mention of the Nazca people would be total without investigation into the Nazca Lines, or the most remarkable legacy of this ancient civilization. Spanning some 385 square miles in the Nazca Desert,located approximately 250 miles south of the Peruvian capital of Lima, the Nazca Lines are a sequence of over 300 gigantic depictions of flora, or fauna,and symbols, comprised of more than 10000 lines. The geoglyphs, and some of which stretch out over 5 miles,are best seen from above, which has long begged the question of why they were created, and what they were intended to communicate,and to whom.
Behind Museo Antonini
is another example of advanced Nazca engineering, the Bisambra aqueduct, and an ancient hydraulic system that directed water from the Bisambra canal to nearby Nazca settlements.

Source: atlasobscura.com