Thursday, October 11, 2012

National Anthropology Museum, Mexico city

Another great addition is that some museums are also available in Google Street View, like Museo Nacional de Antropología.

If you didn't have time and "legs" to do the whole 2-day visit of all the halls, here is your chance to take a second look, notice that there are two floors, just switch between them with the corresponding floor number buttons on the left.



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Street view llega a Palenque

Dado que mis fotos no son suficientes (y nunca lo serán) para darse una idea fiel de lo que es estar en la zona arqueológica de Palenque, pues las fotos no dan ideas de las distancias entre edificio y edificio o hay cosas que no me llaman la atención en ese momento, acá viene la alternativa:

Google Street View ha añadido un pequeño recorrido por la zona, BRAVO.


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Diviertanse mucho y ojalá les sirva para antojarles un paseo a esta maravillosa ciudad antigua.

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Sunday, April 01, 2012

Zacatecas at dusk

     This very nice historic center of Zacatecas is magical, the cathedral is lighted in a very pleasant way and the street (Hidalgo) converts to pedestrian only on the nights where the Festival Cultural de Zacatecas is playing at the Plaza de Armas.

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Friday, March 02, 2012

Prismas Basálticos de Santa María Regla, Hidalgo

This are very interesting basalt rock formations.

The columns were formed by sudden cooling of magma on the surface of the Earth. The very interesting part is that they can be pentagonal, hexagonal or heptagonal prisms.



In this particular place - Santa Maria Regla, near the town of Huasca de Ocampo, state of Hidalgo, México. the columns reach around 30 meters high and their diameter is around 1-1.5 meters, they form a little basin/canyon with waterfalls artificially feed by a man-made water reservoir.









If you are in the area of Pachuca, Hidalgo, it's just about 30 minutes to get to Huasca, a "Pueblo Mágico" and you can visit the old Haciendas of San Miguel Regla and Santa Maria Regla that serves a hotels this days.








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Friday, February 17, 2012

Balam-Kú - the Bat volcano

If you see this sign in the higway
You are certainly on the Escarcega-Chetumal route near Calakmul.
The sign is serious, be aware (not afraid) of bats crossing the road after sunset.

There is a huge cave called Balam-Kú, residence of millions of bats.

Please SLOW-DOWN to 40 Km/h, yeah from those 120km/h you are doing in this brand-new super duper highway.
The speed reduction is needed for two things: avoiding an accident due to lossing control after hitting a bat and to avoid killing this amazing and very usefull animals.


Every night this millions of bats emerge from their cave to feed on the Calakmul biosphere forest. They are not looking to bite humans, but hunting for insects. Imagine what would happen if the bats didn't eat so many pests!!!!


The bats also pollinate flowers and when they eat the fruit, they help disseminate the seeds, so the forest gets three services from this usefull animal. Please don't kill them, they are harmless to humans and we need them a lot.