Tulum, Mexico

The Most Caribbean of the Mayan Ruins


another temple
Temple of the Wind above an inlet believed to have been used to disembark canoes loaded with goods for commercial transactions in the city.
jaguar god
Showgirl poses as the god Jaguar, one of the countless deities in the pantheon of Mayan gods.
mayan corner
Architectural detail decorated with figures from Mayan mythology.
beach in ruins
Sunbathers laze on the near-perfect Caribbean beach below the Tulum ruins complex.
In the more-than-turquoise Caribbean
Mayan family photographed at Praia das Ruínas, with a turquoise Caribbean Sea in the background.
Troop of Mayan Gods
Mayan gods' extras pose for the photograph at the entrance to the Tulum ruins complex.
on the way to the castle
The top of the Castle, the highest building in the city and which housed a lighthouse believed to have identified the entrance to the reef as vessels.
beach talk
A group of bathers coexist at the foot of the cliffs that once protected the city of Tulum, while the waves of the Caribbean Sea come and go.
the temples
Perspective of the Mayan ruins of Tulum, on the Riviera Maya.
Stairs to the Wind
Mayan ruins of Tulum, Riviera Maya.
Built by the sea as an exceptional outpost decisive for the prosperity of the Mayan nation, Tulum was one of its last cities to succumb to Hispanic occupation. At the end of the XNUMXth century, its inhabitants abandoned it to time and to an impeccable coastline of the Yucatan peninsula.

As much as we try, we fail to adjust the bathing landscape forward to the Mayan era.

A sea of ​​turquoise unfurls, in the breeze, over the coral sand. It doesn't quite touch the gray limestone cliffs that border the coast.

Coconut trees and vigorous palm trees rise from the sand and from the top of the Tulum cliff, already covered in tropical vegetation.

Tulum: Mayan Ruins on a Mexican Dream Beach

Dozens of bathers delight in that eccentric caress of water and salt. They are entertained with floats and beach conversations. Above, the Mayan temple of the God of the Wind seems to praise the painting we've revered and the radiant summer well-being.

Beach, Tulum, Mayan Ruins of the Riviera Maya, Mexico

Sunbathers laze on the near-perfect Caribbean beach below the Tulum ruins complex.

Half a millennium had passed since the temple and the inner city had ceased to function. Most of the holidaymakers were - some more, some less - Mayans.

Their short stature, the women's long straight hair, the almond-shaped eyes, and the hooked bird-beak noses left little room for doubt.

The place they frequented is called, even today, Tulum, a Mayan Yucatecan term later inspired by the walls that their ancestors endowed the village to prevent threats coming from the great blue unknown.

It is believed, however, that, in origin, the Maya they will have named it Zama, the City of Dawn, in homage to the esoteric glow that dipped into the ocean every day and that rose from it night after night.

The Iberian conquerors also appeared from those sides. From 1502, the Mayans watched in disbelief as great floating towers rose above the horizon and towered toward them:

they would be the pioneer ships of Cristovão Colombo and his sailors there, which would have anchored to the south, in what is now Honduras.

Castle, Mayan Ruins of the Riviera Maya, Mexico

The top of the Castle, the highest building in the city and which housed a lighthouse believed to have identified the entrance to the reef as vessels.

The Inevitable Intrusion of the Spanish Conquerors

As early as 1517, Francisco Hernández de Córdoba and his fleet were washed ashore. Just a year later, Juan de Grijalva's followed. Grijalva landed on the island of Cozumel. Sailed south.

On that occasion, the Spaniards will have sighted Tulum for the first time.

Offshore reefs made the approach difficult. And immediate contact was still unguarded. For Europeans, it represented a great risk to present themselves to such powerful indigenous cities, without having any idea what kind of welcome awaited them.

Juan Diaz, one of the members of Juan de Grijalva's expedition mentioned Tulum in his writings. Diaz's testimony would later contribute to the invasion inaugurated by Francisco de Montejo.

This one asked the king of Spain for the right to conquer the Yucatan. And he accomplished it in 1521, the same year that, supported by Tlaxcalan warriors,

Hernán Cortéz captured the Aztec emperor Cuauhtemoc and Tenochtitlan, the monumental capital of the Aztec empire.

Tulum Temple Detail, Mayan Ruins of the Riviera Maya, Mexico

Architectural detail decorated with figures from Mayan mythology.

In 1526, Carlos V granted Montejo the title of Captain General of the Yucatan. Two years later, Montejo returned to the region. Tried to take it from the area of ​​Tulum and Chetumal. The resistance he encountered was, however, fierce.

It forced him instead to try west, through the present province of Tabasco.

He would become the son of Montejo, Francisco de Montejo “The groom” to achieve the conquest of the peninsula.

And to materialize it with the foundation of Campeche quality Mérida, still today two of its most impressive colonial cities.

Tulum's Role in the Mayan Empire

According to historical records, the Tulum area was populated from the XNUMXth century AD

It prospered under the Mayan sphere of influence from 1200 AD as a complementary trading post of Cobá, at the confluence of several sacbeobs, paved royal paths from Central Mexico and other parts of Central America.

In Tulum, the Mayans were used to exchanging food, cotton, decorative, work and even war instruments, silver and gold, salt, textiles and feathers. The city reached its height between the XNUMXth and XNUMXth centuries. It had the commercial impulse of another mineral raw material: obsidian, salt rock fromthe Maya.

Obsidian had and still has a special place in their culture and presence in numerous sculptures and also religious expressions. The Mayans associated it with divinity. They considered that she was raised in the infernal underworld of Xibalba, a place where the gods of death reigned.

Showgirl Deus Maia, Tulum, Mayan Ruins of the Riviera Maya, Mexico

Showgirl poses as the god Jaguar, one of the countless deities in the pantheon of Mayan gods.

For these and other reasons, Tulum prospered. For a long time, it bypassed the occupation and destruction disseminated by the conquerors. The dense jungle of the current Mexican region of Quintana Roo isolated it from other areas that the Spaniards took over.

Controversial Reasons for Abandoning Mayan Cities

Although the subject raises heated debate, the idea has prevailed that, when the Spaniards arrived, a good part of the larger Mayan cities had been abandoned a few centuries ago. Already then they were transformed into ruins that the jungle swallowed up.

The most accepted causes for this stampede were the overpopulation of about 15 million subjects throughout the Maya world. And the drought, deforestation and the extermination of large animals that served them as food.

About 70 years after the Spaniards began to liquidate the Mayan Empire obsessed with the demand for gold, Tulum resisted. Until smallpox and other diseases brought from the Old World by sailors, warriors and missionaries arrived there.

Tulum's turn

At the turn of the XNUMXth to the XNUMXth century, Tulum suffered a general and definitive stampede.

When its people left, the urban structure and the city's architecture were bequeathed to time.

Those who, like us, have the privilege of exploring them, quickly realize that this was not just any place.

Its 1000 and 1600 inhabitants occupied a vast area farther from the ocean and outside the religious complex.

This stronghold was protected by a wall three to five meters high, eight meters thick and about 400 meters long, parallel to the coast.

Around 170 meters on both sides oblique to the sea.

Tulum, Mayan Ruins of the Riviera Maya, Mexico

Temple of the Wind above an inlet believed to have been used to disembark canoes loaded with goods for commercial transactions in the city.

The northwest and southwest sides of the walls were equipped with watchtowers.

Near the north face, a cenote (doline of a complex and vast underground aquifer system eroded into limestone) supplied the city with fresh water.

Others of the same system reinforced the supply around: Naharon, Tortuga, Vacaha, Abejas, Nohoch Kin.

Several of them today serve as alternative bathing attractions on the shores of the Caribbean Sea. Some were recently discovered to contain preserved human bones between 9.000 to 13.000 years old.

It is also known that the cenotes were later used by Mayans for sacrificial offerings.

Tulum's Role in the Mayan Empire II

At the heart of Tulum's walled area was the Castle, a pyramidal temple measuring 7.5 meters and an imposing figure that sets it apart from other buildings, including the Temple of Frescoes and the Temple of the Sun, the two most prominent.

A small sanctuary in the Castle seems to have been built later as a lighthouse. Its function was to indicate a natural entry into the coral reef by which approaching canoes could enter.

Coincidence or not, the beach in the extension of this passage takes the form of a rare cove both up and down the coast.

This small bay was endowed with the Temple of the Winds. It is believed that with the purpose of blessing navigation in an area of ​​Central America that, now as then, continues to be plagued by cyclones.

From Tulum, goods brought by sea could still be transported up the Motagua and Usumacincta/Pasión rivers. These river arteries provided additional access to the lowlands and highlands of the Yucatan and Guatemala.

The favorable configuration of the coast may have been at the base of the foundation of Tulum. Its relevance soon justified that it was endowed with the religious, ceremonial but also empirical and scientific paraphernalia that the Maya they always covered their civilization.

The Temple of the Frescoes was said to have been used as an observatory of the sun's movements. It is believed to be the reason why several figures of the sun god (Kinich Anau) appear in niches on its façade.

Painted stucco coatings suggest that the temple was, however, dedicated to the god Itzamnaaj, creator of writing, patron of the arts and sciences.

Tulum Family Beach, Mayan Ruins of the Riviera Maya, Mexico

Mayan family photographed at Praia das Ruínas, with a turquoise Caribbean Sea in the background.

Divine Monument (bathing) to the Mayan Civilization

Day after day, the complex keeps outsiders most interested in history entertained with the explanations and assumptions of Tulum's creation and existence. Visitors increase from year to year.

The view of the Temple of the Winds with the edge of the turquoise Caribbean Sea on the right is Tulum's main hallmark. It is one of the observation points that we find more crowded with people.

Thanks largely to this perspective, Tulum has become the third most popular historic attraction in Mexico, after Chichen Itza (another ancient Mayan city) and Tenochtitlan (ancient Aztec capital).

But on days with clear skies and heat like the one we had before, the ruins have a worthy rival on the beach at their foot.

The sun had already risen to its zenith and was descending towards sunset. It had fallen so little into the sky that the blue of the sea remained irresistible. Accordingly, the number of bathers in the sand continued to increase.

At the entrance to the complex, some descendants of the Maya from other times took advantage of this influx and fascination for the culture of their ancestors to earn a living:

"Señores, we invite you to your photos with the mayas. Vengan, vengan.” appealed in costumes and feather headdresses, with glittering jewelry and paintings.

Extras Mayan Gods, Tulum, Mayan Ruins of the Riviera Maya, Mexico

Mayan gods' extras pose for the photograph at the entrance to the Tulum ruins complex.

Thus, they incarnated jaguars, birds of prey and other divine figures from the rich Mayan pantheon.

Despite the exorbitant values, several passersby became customers and proudly registered their passage.

More information about Tulum and the Riviera Maya on the Visit Mexico website.

Big Zimbabwe

Great Zimbabwe, Endless Mystery

Between the 1500th and XNUMXth centuries, Bantu peoples built what became the largest medieval city in sub-Saharan Africa. From XNUMX onwards, with the passage of the first Portuguese explorers arriving from Mozambique, the city was already in decline. Its ruins, which inspired the name of the present-day Zimbabwean nation, have many unanswered questions.  
Izamal, Mexico

The Holy, Yellow and Beautiful Mexican City

Until the arrival of the Spanish conquerors, Izamal was a center of worship for the supreme Mayan god Itzamná and Kinich Kakmó, the one of the sun. Gradually, the invaders razed the various pyramids of the natives. In its place, they built a large Franciscan convent and a prolific colonial houses, with the same solar tone in which the now Catholic city shines.
Campeche, Mexico

Campeche Upon Can Pech

As was the case throughout Mexico, the conquerors arrived, saw and won. Can Pech, the Mayan village, had almost 40 inhabitants, palaces, pyramids and an exuberant urban architecture, but in 1540 there were less than 6 natives. Over the ruins, the Spaniards built Campeche, one of the most imposing colonial cities in the Americas.
luxor, Egypt

From Luxor to Thebes: Journey to Ancient Egypt

Thebes was raised as the new supreme capital of the Egyptian Empire, the seat of Amon, the God of Gods. Modern Luxor inherited the Temple of Karnak and its sumptuousness. Between one and the other flow the sacred Nile and millennia of dazzling history.
Mérida, Mexico

The Most Exuberant of Meridas

In 25 BC, the Romans founded Emerita Augusta, capital of Lusitania. The Spanish expansion generated three other Méridas in the world. Of the four, the Yucatan capital is the most colorful and lively, resplendent with Hispanic colonial heritage and multi-ethnic life.
Cobá to Pac Chen, Mexico

From the Ruins to the Mayan Homes

On the Yucatan Peninsula, the history of the second largest indigenous Mexican people is intertwined with their daily lives and merges with modernity. In Cobá, we went from the top of one of its ancient pyramids to the heart of a village of our times.
San Cristobal de Las Casas, Mexico

The Home Sweet Home of Mexican Social Conscience

Mayan, mestizo and Hispanic, Zapatista and tourist, country and cosmopolitan, San Cristobal has no hands to measure. In it, Mexican and expatriate backpacker visitors and political activists share a common ideological demand.
Campeche, Mexico

A Bingo so playful that you play with puppets

On Friday nights, a group of ladies occupy tables at Independencia Park and bet on trifles. The tiniest prizes come out to them in combinations of cats, hearts, comets, maracas and other icons.

Mexico City, Mexico

mexican soul

With more than 20 million inhabitants in a vast metropolitan area, this megalopolis marks, from its heart of zócalo, the spiritual pulse of a nation that has always been vulnerable and dramatic.

Machu Picchu, Peru

The City Lost in the Mystery of the Incas

As we wander around Machu Picchu, we find meaning in the most accepted explanations for its foundation and abandonment. But whenever the complex is closed, the ruins are left to their enigmas.
San Ignacio Mini, Argentina

The Impossible Jesuit Missions of San Ignacio Mini

In the century. In the XNUMXth century, the Jesuits expanded a religious domain in the heart of South America by converting the Guarani Indians into Jesuit missions. But the Iberian Crowns ruined the tropical utopia of the Society of Jesus.
San Cristóbal de las Casas a Campeche, Mexico

A Relay of Faith

The Catholic equivalent of Our Lady of Fátima, Our Lady of Guadalupe moves and moves Mexico. Its faithful cross the country's roads, determined to bring the proof of their faith to the patroness of the Americas.
Champoton, Mexico

Rodeo Under Sombreros

Champoton, in Campeche, hosts a fair honored by the Virgén de La Concepción. O rodeo Mexican under local sombreros reveals the elegance and skill of the region's cowboys.
Campeche, Mexico

200 Years of Playing with Luck

At the end of the XNUMXth century, the peasants surrendered to a game introduced to cool the fever of cash cards. Today, played almost only for Abuelites, lottery little more than a fun place.
Yucatan, Mexico

The End of the End of the World

The announced day passed but the End of the World insisted on not arriving. In Central America, today's Mayans watched and put up with incredulity all the hysteria surrounding their calendar.
Yucatan, Mexico

The Sidereal Murphy's Law That Doomed the Dinosaurs

Scientists studying the crater caused by a meteorite impact 66 million years ago have come to a sweeping conclusion: it happened exactly over a section of the 13% of the Earth's surface susceptible to such devastation. It is a threshold zone on the Mexican Yucatan peninsula that a whim of the evolution of species allowed us to visit.
Uxmal, Yucatan, Mexico

The Mayan Capital That Piled It Up To Collapse

The term Uxmal means built three times. In the long pre-Hispanic era of dispute in the Mayan world, the city had its heyday, corresponding to the top of the Pyramid of the Diviner at its heart. It will have been abandoned before the Spanish Conquest of the Yucatan. Its ruins are among the most intact on the Yucatan Peninsula.
Barrancas del Cobre (Copper Canyon), Chihuahua, Mexico

The Deep Mexico of the Barrancas del Cobre

Without warning, the Chihuahua highlands give way to endless ravines. Sixty million geological years have furrowed them and made them inhospitable. The Rarámuri indigenous people continue to call them home.
Creel to Los Mochis, Mexico

The Barrancas del Cobre & the CHEPE Iron Horse

The Sierra Madre Occidental's relief turned the dream into a construction nightmare that lasted six decades. In 1961, at last, the prodigious Chihuahua al Pacifico Railroad was opened. Its 643km cross some of the most dramatic scenery in Mexico.
chihuahua, Mexico

¡Ay Chihuahua !

Mexicans have adapted this expression as one of their favorite manifestations of surprise. While we wander through the capital of the homonymous state of the Northwest, we often exclaim it.
Amboseli National Park, Mount Kilimanjaro, Normatior Hill
Safari
Amboseli National Park, Kenya

A Gift from the Kilimanjaro

The first European to venture into these Masai haunts was stunned by what he found. And even today, large herds of elephants and other herbivores roam the pastures irrigated by the snow of Africa's biggest mountain.
Prayer flags in Ghyaru, Nepal
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 4th – Upper Banana to Ngawal, Nepal

From Nightmare to Dazzle

Unbeknownst to us, we are faced with an ascent that leads us to despair. We pulled our strength as far as possible and reached Ghyaru where we felt closer than ever to the Annapurnas. The rest of the way to Ngawal felt like a kind of extension of the reward.
Music Theater and Exhibition Hall, Tbilisi, Georgia
Architecture & Design
Tbilisi, Georgia

Georgia still Perfumed by the Rose Revolution

In 2003, a popular political uprising made the sphere of power in Georgia tilt from East to West. Since then, the capital Tbilisi has not renounced its centuries of Soviet history, nor the revolutionary assumption of integrating into Europe. When we visit, we are dazzled by the fascinating mix of their past lives.
Bungee jumping, Queenstown, New Zealand
Adventure
Queenstown, New Zealand

Queenstown, the Queen of Extreme Sports

In the century. XVIII, the Kiwi government proclaimed a mining village on the South Island "fit for a queen".Today's extreme scenery and activities reinforce the majestic status of ever-challenging Queenstown.
portfolio, Got2Globe, Travel photography, images, best photographs, travel photos, world, Earth
Ceremonies and Festivities
Cape Coast, Ghana

The Divine Purification Festival

The story goes that, once, a plague devastated the population of Cape Coast of today Ghana. Only the prayers of the survivors and the cleansing of evil carried out by the gods will have put an end to the scourge. Since then, the natives have returned the blessing of the 77 deities of the traditional Oguaa region with the frenzied Fetu Afahye festival.
Rabat, Malta, Mdina, Palazzo Xara
Cities
Rabat, Malta

A Former Suburb in the Heart of Malta

If Mdina became the noble capital of the island, the Knights Hospitaller decided to sacrifice the fortification of present-day Rabat. The city outside the walls expanded. It survives as a popular and rural counterpoint to the now living museum in Mdina.
Tsukiji fish market, Tokyo, Japan
Meal
Tokyo, Japan

The Fish Market That Lost its Freshness

In a year, each Japanese eats more than their weight in fish and shellfish. Since 1935, a considerable part was processed and sold in the largest fish market in the world. Tsukiji was terminated in October 2018, and replaced by Toyosu's.
the projectionist
Culture
Sainte-Luce, Martinique

The Nostalgic Projectionist

From 1954 to 1983, Gérard Pierre screened many of the famous films arriving in Martinique. 30 years after the closing of the room in which he worked, it was still difficult for this nostalgic native to change his reel.
4th of July Fireworks-Seward, Alaska, United States
Sport
Seward, Alaska

The Longest 4th of July

The independence of the United States is celebrated, in Seward, Alaska, in a modest way. Even so, the 4th of July and its celebration seem to have no end.
Mount Lamjung Kailas Himal, Nepal, altitude sickness, mountain prevent treat, travel
Traveling
Annapurna Circuit: 2th - Chame a Upper BananaNepal

(I) Eminent Annapurnas

We woke up in Chame, still below 3000m. There we saw, for the first time, the snowy and highest peaks of the Himalayas. From there, we set off for another walk along the Annapurna Circuit through the foothills and slopes of the great mountain range. towards Upper Banana.
small browser
Ethnic
Honiara e Gizo, Solomon Islands

The Profaned Temple of the Solomon Islands

A Spanish navigator baptized them, eager for riches like those of the biblical king. Ravaged by World War II, conflicts and natural disasters, the Solomon Islands are far from prosperity.
Sunset, Avenue of Baobabs, Madagascar
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio

days like so many others

aggie gray, Samoa, South Pacific, Marlon Brando Fale
History
Apia, Western Samoa

The Host of the South Pacific

She sold burguês to GI's in World War II and opened a hotel that hosted Marlon Brando and Gary Cooper. Aggie Gray passed away in 2. Her legacy lives on in the South Pacific.
Fuerteventura Canary Island Weather, PN Corralejo, Playa del Pozo
Islands
Fuerteventura, Canary Islands

Fuerteventura: Canary Island and Time Raft

A short ferry crossing and we disembark in Corralejo, at the top northeast of Fuerteventura. With Morocco and Africa a mere 100km away, we get lost in the wonders of unique desert, volcanic and post-colonial sceneries.
ala juumajarvi lake, oulanka national park, finland
Winter White
Kuusamo ao PN Oulanka, Finland

Under the Arctic's Icy Spell

We are at 66º North and at the gates of Lapland. In these parts, the white landscape belongs to everyone and to no one like the snow-covered trees, the atrocious cold and the endless night.
silhouette and poem, Cora coralina, Goias Velho, Brazil
Literature
Goiás Velho, Brazil

The Life and Work of a Marginal Writer

Born in Goiás, Ana Lins Bretas spent most of her life far from her castrating family and the city. Returning to its origins, it continued to portray the prejudiced mentality of the Brazilian countryside
Enriquillo, Great Lake of the Antilles, Dominican Republic, view from Cueva das Caritas de Taínos
Nature
Lake Enriquillo, Dominican Republic

Enriquillo: the Great Lake of the Antilles

Between 300 and 400 km2, situated 44 meters below sea level, Enriquillo is the supreme lake of the Antilles. Regardless of its hypersalinity and the stifling, atrocious temperatures, it's still increasing. Scientists have a hard time explaining why.
Mother Armenia Statue, Yerevan, Armenia
Autumn
Yerevan, Armenia

A Capital between East and West

Heiress of the Soviet civilization, aligned with the great Russia, Armenia allows itself to be seduced by the most democratic and sophisticated ways of Western Europe. In recent times, the two worlds have collided in the streets of your capital. From popular and political dispute, Yerevan will dictate the new course of the nation.
Hikers on the Ice Lake Trail, Annapurna Circuit, Nepal
Natural Parks
Annapurna Circuit: 7th - Braga - Ice Lake, Nepal

Annapurna Circuit – The Painful Acclimatization of the Ice Lake

On the way up to the Ghyaru village, we had a first and unexpected show of how ecstatic the Annapurna Circuit can be tasted. Nine kilometers later, in Braga, due to the need to acclimatize, we climbed from 3.470m from Braga to 4.600m from Lake Kicho Tal. We only felt some expected tiredness and the increase in the wonder of the Annapurna Mountains.
Traveler above Jökursarlón icy lagoon, Iceland
UNESCO World Heritage
Jökursarlón Lagoon, Vatnajökull Glacier, Iceland

The Faltering of Europe's King Glacier

Only in Greenland and Antarctica are glaciers comparable to Vatnajökull, the supreme glacier of the old continent. And yet, even this colossus that gives more meaning to the term ice land is surrendering to the relentless siege of global warming.
Characters
Look-alikes, Actors and Extras

Make-believe stars

They are the protagonists of events or are street entrepreneurs. They embody unavoidable characters, represent social classes or epochs. Even miles from Hollywood, without them, the world would be more dull.
Vietnamese queue
Beaches

Nha Trang-Doc Let, Vietnam

The Salt of the Vietnamese Land

In search of attractive coastlines in old Indochina, we become disillusioned with the roughness of Nha Trang's bathing area. And it is in the feminine and exotic work of the Hon Khoi salt flats that we find a more pleasant Vietnam.

Chiang Khong to Luang Prabang, Laos, Through the Mekong Below
Religion
Chiang Khong - Luang Prabang, In Stock

Slow Boat, Down the Mekong River

Laos' beauty and lower cost are good reasons to sail between Chiang Khong and Luang Prabang. But this long descent of the Mekong River can be as exhausting as it is picturesque.
Serra do Mar train, Paraná, airy view
On Rails
Curitiba a Morretes, Paraná, Brazil

Down Paraná, on Board the Train Serra do Mar

For more than two centuries, only a winding and narrow road connected Curitiba to the coast. Until, in 1885, a French company opened a 110 km railway. We walked along it to Morretes, the final station for passengers today. 40km from the original coastal terminus of Paranaguá.
Sentosa Island, Singapore, Family on Sentosa Artificial Beach
Society
Sentosa, Singapore

Singapore's Fun Island

It was a stronghold where the Japanese murdered Allied prisoners and welcomed troops who pursued Indonesian saboteurs. Today, the island of Sentosa fights the monotony that gripped the country.
Women with long hair from Huang Luo, Guangxi, China
Daily life
Longsheng, China

Huang Luo: the Chinese Village of the Longest Hairs

In a multi-ethnic region covered with terraced rice paddies, the women of Huang Luo have surrendered to the same hairy obsession. They let the longest hair in the world grow, years on end, to an average length of 170 to 200 cm. Oddly enough, to keep them beautiful and shiny, they only use water and rice.
ice tunnel, black gold route, Valdez, Alaska, USA
Wildlife
Valdez, Alaska

On the Black Gold Route

In 1989, the Exxon Valdez oil tanker caused a massive environmental disaster. The vessel stopped plying the seas, but the victim city that gave it its name continues on the path of crude oil from the Arctic Ocean.
Passengers, scenic flights-Southern Alps, New Zealand
Scenic Flights
Aoraki / Mount Cook, New Zealand

The Aeronautical Conquest of the Southern Alps

In 1955, pilot Harry Wigley created a system for taking off and landing on asphalt or snow. Since then, his company has unveiled, from the air, some of the greatest scenery in Oceania.