Que tal? This is a special blog entry for two reasons. First, it is all about our visit to Machu Picchu, one of the most famous places in the world! Secondly, it will be my last blog entry as Nathan and I only have a few weeks left of our trip. Even though our plan was to travel through Central America and Mexico, we decided we just didn't have enough time. Besides, there is so much to see here in Peru that we don't want to rush.
Have you ever heard of Machu Picchu? If you don't recognize the name, the pictures might look familiar to you. Machu Picchu is an ancient Incan city that was built high on a mountain in southern Peru around the middle of the 15th century. It is sometimes called "The Lost City of the Incas" because it wasn't known to the rest of the world until the early 19th century. Archaeologists believe that the Incans only inhabited the site for a hundred years or so, then abondoned it during the Spanish conquest. However, the Spanish never found out about the site so it was never plundered or destroyed. For this reason one can still see many of the original structures.
There are records of people discovering and visiting the site in the late 1800's and early 1900's. By then it was very overgrown with jungle vegetation. Local people knew of the site for years, but it wasn't until an archaeologist named Hiram Bingham was led to it by a native Quechua boy that the rest of the world found out about it. Bingham did a lot of research and published books about the site. This helped turn it into one of the most famous Incan sites in the world and now thousands of people visit the ruins every year. This is the entrance gate to the city.