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Introduction
Choquequirao means "cradle
of gold" in Quechua although this is probably not its
original Inca name. It is another "lost city of the
Incas" located high on a ridge spur almost 1750m above
the raging glacier-fed Apurimac River and surrounded by
towering snow-capped peaks.
The US explorer Gary Ziegler suggests that Choquequirao
may have been the place where the last Inca, Tupac Amaru,
was raised among Inca Priestesses. The abundance of many
double jamb doorways and niches indicates that the place
was held in high status.
The ruins were first visited and described to the
western world by a French explorer during the 18th
century. Hiram Bingham visited the site in 1910. This
was his first experience of "lost cities" prior to his
discovery of Machu Picchu in 1911. The remoteness and
inaccessibility have discouraged visitors until fairly
recently when COPESCO constructed a footbridge over the
Apurimac River below the ruins. Even today the ruins are
still rarely visited although, with the enforcement of
new regulations on the Inca Trail, Choquequirao is
destined to replace the traditional hike as the serious
trekkers alternative.
Back Adventure

info@peruexpediciones.com
perutour@hotmail.com
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ferrocarril, station, tacna, peru, tacna, peru, tacna,
peru, tacna, peru, tacna, peru, tacna, peru, tacna, peru,tacna |
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