Flaco desde Siempre

Oriundo de Punta Arenas. Malcriado en Santiago. Enamorado del Sur. Estudiante de Derecho, Músico Trompetista, Fotógrafo a ratos, ladrón de lapices BIC huachos, Muralista, Flaco desde siempre pero devoto de la buena mesa. Chileno de tiempo completo. Dámaris adicto.
humorhistorico:

Hummm que argumento tan sólidamente lógico XD.

humorhistorico:

Hummm que argumento tan sólidamente lógico XD.

mapsontheweb:

Illustrated map of Chile

mapsontheweb:

Illustrated map of Chile

(vía porlasbarbasdeclotario)

(Fuente: mrmohandar, vía jaidefinichon)

gonzaloohidalgo:

El Sapolio (Publicidad de revista Zig Zag - 1913)

gonzaloohidalgo:

El Sapolio (Publicidad de revista Zig Zag - 1913)

(Fuente: soy-volatil)

irenamarkovic:

Chichen-Itza, a center of Mayan culture

(vía soy-volatil)

wensho:

Una de mis frases favoritas de Cortázar…

wensho:

Una de mis frases favoritas de Cortázar…

(vía malaclasecl)

nosistema:

Afiche de concierto, 1972

nosistema:

Afiche de concierto, 1972

(Fuente: italonolli, vía defensadeltrovador)

retrochile:

Claudio Arrau tocando la

generocl:

ladeco, punta arenas

generocl:

ladeco, punta arenas

Más justicia, menos monumentos

Inti Illimani (via sweetcida)

anitaleocadia:

The Sequence - Urban Sculpture by Arne Quinze in Brussels

(Via HomeDSGN and Afflante). On Tumblr.

climateadaptation:

Road crews tear down Mayan pyramid to make gravel.

Belizean police are investigating a construction company that has destroyed most of one of the largest Mayan pyramids in the Caribbean nation to make gravel to dump on village roads, according to reports from the Caribbean.
Archaeologists and a local TV station witnessed the destruction Friday as bulldozers and excavators continued to demolish the 60-foot-tall main temple at Nohmul — “great mound” — one of the tallest structures in northern Belize, along the Mexican border in the Yucatan Peninsula.
“We can’t salvage what has happened out here,” John Morris, of the Institute of Archaeology, told 7 News Belize. “It is an incredible display of ignorance. I am appalled.” A news crew was threatened by a man with a machete as dump trucks hauled away rock and limestone from the temple, which has been “whittled down to a narrow core,” the TV station said.
A Caterpillar excavator was photographed tearing down what was left of the limestone-rich ruins. “It’s like being punched in the stomach, it’s just so horrendous,” Jamie Awe, head of the institute, told the Associated Press. “These guys knew that this was an ancient structure. It’s just bloody laziness.”
The pre-Colombian site is about 2,500 years old and consists of twin ceremonial clusters surrounded by 10 plazas and connected by a raised causeway. Mayans used stone tools to quarry the rock and build the complex by hand. An estimated 40,000 people are believed to have lived there between 500 and 250 BC.

More of these incidents to come in the years ahead as population growth outweighs the need to protect resources.

climateadaptation:

Road crews tear down Mayan pyramid to make gravel.

Belizean police are investigating a construction company that has destroyed most of one of the largest Mayan pyramids in the Caribbean nation to make gravel to dump on village roads, according to reports from the Caribbean.

Archaeologists and a local TV station witnessed the destruction Friday as bulldozers and excavators continued to demolish the 60-foot-tall main temple at Nohmul — “great mound” — one of the tallest structures in northern Belize, along the Mexican border in the Yucatan Peninsula.

“We can’t salvage what has happened out here,” John Morris, of the Institute of Archaeology, told 7 News Belize. “It is an incredible display of ignorance. I am appalled.” A news crew was threatened by a man with a machete as dump trucks hauled away rock and limestone from the temple, which has been “whittled down to a narrow core,” the TV station said.

A Caterpillar excavator was photographed tearing down what was left of the limestone-rich ruins. “It’s like being punched in the stomach, it’s just so horrendous,” Jamie Awe, head of the institute, told the Associated Press. “These guys knew that this was an ancient structure. It’s just bloody laziness.”

The pre-Colombian site is about 2,500 years old and consists of twin ceremonial clusters surrounded by 10 plazas and connected by a raised causeway. Mayans used stone tools to quarry the rock and build the complex by hand. An estimated 40,000 people are believed to have lived there between 500 and 250 BC.

More of these incidents to come in the years ahead as population growth outweighs the need to protect resources.

elguindilla:

El paso del tiempo en Google Earth

Gracias Juan, por el enlace