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8 AMAG: New hot rolling mill in Ranshofen puts AMAG in the top league. (No longer available online.) In: www.AMAG.at. AMAG, November 25, 2014, archived from the original on April 9, 2018; retrieved April 9, 2018. 9 AMAG: AMAG opens Europe's most modern aluminum cold rolling mill. In: www.AMAG.at. AMAG, June 23, 2017; retrieved April 9, 2018.
Archaeological sites in Peru are numerous and diverse, representing different aspects including temples and fortresses of the various cultures of ancient Peru, such as the Moche and Nazca. The sites vary in importance from small local sites to UNESCO World Heritage sites of global importance. [ 1 ]
Entrance of the Ancon Site Museum. Ancon is an archaeological site in the north of the Bay of Ancon, in the Ancón District, on the central coast of Peru.It is one of the most important centers of the Peruvian archeology and features a vast necropolis of the pre-Hispanic era, with countless funerary sites.
Egon Ranshofen-Wertheimer (1894–1957), diplomat, journalist, political scientist; advised the US gov. in WWII Willi Schneider (1903–1971) & Rudi Schneider (1908–1957), brothers, famous for parapsychology between the wars
El Perú Antiguo III (500–1400) El Horizonte Medio y los estados regionales, Empresa Editora El Comercio S.A., Lima, 2010. ISBN 978-612-4069-88-8; Kauffmann Doig, Federico: Historia y arte del Perú antiguo. Tomo 3. Lima, Ediciones PEISA, 2002. ISBN 9972-40-215-0; Lumbreras, Luis Guillermo: “El Imperio Wari”. Incluido en Historia del ...
C. Caballo Muerto; Cabeza de Vaca, Tumbes; Cahuachi; Cajamarquilla; Cantalloc Aqueducts; Carajía; Caral; Casma–Sechin culture; Cerro Pátapo ruins; Cerro Sechín
Tambomachay [1] (possibly from Quechua tampu inn, guest house, mach'ay cave, or machay drunkenness, to get drunk or "spindle with thread") [2] [3] is an archaeological site associated with the Inca Empire, located near Cusco, Peru. An alternate Spanish name is El Baño del Inca ("the bath of the Inca").
The Place of Memory, Tolerance and Social Inclusion (Spanish: Lugar de la Memoria, la Tolerancia y la Inclusión Social, LUM) is a museum in Lima, Peru, dedicated to the Peruvian internal conflict of the 1980s and 1990s. It opened in 2015 and is managed by the Ministry of Culture.