A tiny robot has made a momentous archaeological discovery deep under the famous Temple of Quetzalcoatl, near the Pyramid of the Sun in Mexico, it was announced on Monday.

Experts expected to find just one ancient chamber at the end of a stretch of 2,000-year-old unexplored tunnel at the Teotihuacan site. Instead, the remote-controlled vehicle has beamed back images of three mysterious caverns.

The three-foot-long investigator, named Tlaloc II-TC after the Aztec god of rain, was first lowered into the depths of the pyramid to check it was safe for human entry.

The temple is best known for the towering Pyramids of the Moon and the Sun.

The complex of pyramids, plazas, temples and avenues was once the center of a city of more than 100,000 inhabitants and may have been the largest and most influential city in pre-Hispanic North America at the time.

But nearly 2,500 years after the city was founded – and about 2,100 years after the Teotihuacan culture began to flourish there – very little is known about the identity of its rulers.

No depiction of a ruler, or the tomb of a monarch, has ever been found, setting the metropolis apart from other pre-Hispanic cultures that deified their rulers.

More information, photos and video can be found here.

10 Comments CherryPie on Apr 30th 2013

Industrialisation

Cooling Towers

8 Comments CherryPie on Apr 29th 2013

Listening to the Logos rather than to me, it is wise to agree that all things are in reality one thing and one thing only.

Heraclitus, Fragment 50

A Little Bit of Magic

14 Comments CherryPie on Apr 28th 2013

Snowy Hills

To Cold to Picnic

6 Comments CherryPie on Apr 27th 2013

As  one cycle of the 52 photos project completes new cycle begins.  I looking forward to starting this cycle from day one rather than half way through like I did last year. Bella is promising deeper themes for this year, I hope I am up to the challenge ;-)

IMG_4135

When Little Red Riding Hood arrived at her grandmother’s house she was surprised to find that the door was open:

She called out: ‘Good morning,’ but received no answer; so she went to the bed and drew back the curtains. There lay her grandmother with her cap pulled far over her face, and looking very strange.

‘Oh! grandmother,’ she said, ‘what big ears you have!’

‘All the better to hear you with, my child,’ was the reply.

‘But, grandmother, what big eyes you have!’ she said.

‘All the better to see you with, my dear.’

‘But, grandmother, what large hands you have!’

‘All the better to hug you with.’

‘Oh! but, grandmother, what a terrible big mouth you have!’

‘All the better to eat you with!’

And scarcely had the wolf said this, than with one bound he was out of bed and swallowed up Red Riding Hood.*

More conversations can be found in this weeks gallery.

* From the Fairytale Little Red Riding Hood by Brothers Grimm

12 Comments CherryPie on Apr 26th 2013

Misty Morning

I invite you to join me at Vision & Verb to learn about Bess of Hardwick who was a friend and confidant of  Queen Elizabeth I.

Vision and Verb

6 Comments CherryPie on Apr 26th 2013

The Road to Mainsgill Farm

8 Comments CherryPie on Apr 25th 2013

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