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- LA PAZ, Bolivia (Reuters)
- The remains of what is thought to be a 1,000- to 1,500-year-old temple
have been found below the waters of South America's lake Titicaca, a scientific
expedition said Tuesday.
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- "We've found what appears to have been a 200-metre
(660 feet) long, 50-metre (160 feet) wide holy temple, a terrace for crops,
a pre-Incan road and an 800-metre (2,600 feet) long containing wall,"
said Lorenzo Apis, the Italian scientist leading the expedition in a region
of the lake around 90 miles (150 km) northeast of the Bolivian capital
La Paz.
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- The expedition "Atahuallpa 2000," backed by
the international scientific group Akakor Geographical Exploring, made
over 200 dives into water 65 to 100 feet (20-30 metres) deep to record
the remains on film and with photographs.
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- The expedition will publish complete findings of its
18-day study in November and plans to eventually raise archeologicalremains
to the surface.
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- The ruins were found in an area of the lake between the
town of Copacabana and the popular tourist destinations of the Island of
the Sun and Island of the Moon.
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- The research involved 10 scientists from Italy, 10 from
Brazil, five Bolivians, two Germans and a Romanian.
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- Lake Titicaca, some 12,464 feet (3,800 metres) above
sea level, lies on the border between Bolivia and Peru, and is the highest
navigable lake in the world.
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- The Tihuanacu culture lived on its shores before they
became part of the Incan empire with its base in Cusco, Peru.
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- "All this means our civilizations have left more
footprints than we had thought," said Antonio Eguino, Bolivia's vice
minister of culture, whose government pledged financial and technical support
to preserve and protect the ruins.
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