Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. This imposing complex of 26 mud brick pyramids is surrounded by an extensive forest of carob trees, where the attractions include Huaca del Pueblo, Cerro La Raya and Huaca las Balsas.

  2. 11 de jul. de 2010 · El Complejo Arqueológico de Túcume, constituye uno de los monumentos prehispánicos más importantes de la costa Norte de Perú, dada su magnitud y extensión de aproximadamente 220 Has. de espacio arquitecturado, albergando 26 edificios de carácter monumental asociados a estructuras de rango menor (plazas, montículos, patios, sistemas de ...

  3. Este espectacular complejo arqueológico constituye un punto muy importante por la gran concentración de pirámides estructuradas en barro que corresponden al último desarrollo de la cultura Lambayeque, cuyos inicios se remontan a los setecientos años después de cristo.

  4. 7 de mar. de 2022 · Túcume is an archaeological site that is located 33 km north of the city of Chiclayo, in the lower part of the Lambayeque Valley, in northwestern Peru. It is formed by the remains of numerous adobe pyramids or huacas, around a rocky structure known as Cerro La Raya.

  5. www.fertur-travel.com › blog › archaeological-sitesPyramids of Túcume

    The pyramids of Túcume site is one of the main monumental centers in the Lambayeque region and the whole of Peru. The archaeological complex extends over 220 hectares, and is surrounded by fertile farming land and the country houses of Raya and San Antonio.

  6. The Valley of the Pyramids, also called the Túcume Archaeological Complex, extends over 220 hectares. In the area you can find 26 pyramid-shaped buildings made of adobe (clay and sand). The buildings, many of them temples, are around 40 meters high and were built from the years 700 to 1,000 AD. approximately, by the Lambayeque Culture.

  7. 20 de oct. de 2020 · Túcume covered an area of around 540 acres encompassing 26 major pyramids and mounds, built over several phases using adobe clay bricks, and with each phase being attributed to a single dynastic generation of rulers.