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The Mysterious Lost City Of The Tairona Hidden In The Jungles Of Colombia

Lost ancient city in Colombia

First version of this article was originally published on May 18, 2015

MessageToEagle.com – Today we follow an unknown ancient city of Buritaca located in an isolated massif of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, in the northern part of Colombia.

The Tairona Indians built their sophisticated cities on steep mountain ridges, but they did not construct them on their own initiative, according to Cristobal de Molina, the Spanish priest, chronicler, and an outstanding Quechua speaker, who recorded many indigenous, religious beliefs and practices of Inca.

However Ecclesiastes 1:4 says that “generations come, and generations go, but the earth lasts forever”, and so the remaining paths of Buritaca, along with stone roads, turrets, bridges, terraces carved into the mountain side, and countless stairs bathed in a dense jungle of wild greens.

The mysterious ‘lost city’ – named by the Tairona Indians to ‘Buritaca 200’ after a nearby river – is covered with dense jungle and occupies a gigantic area consisting of the paved roads and streets.
The area is at least ten times as large as the famous Machu Picchu and is also very reminiscent of it but the only way to reach the place and admire, is either by helicopter or by climbing up some 1,200-1,300 stone steps through dense jungle.

The top platforms of the city are piled one upon another so the only connection with them is through a gigantic maze of stairs.

They are located much higher than the natural roof of the jungle vegetation and cover all steep slopes of the city that was built vertically.

Houses and temples, of which location was matched with the stars, celestial bodies and calendar, stood upon circular stone foundations four to twelve meters in diameter. Exactly 1,200 steps lead up to the terraced temple at the top.

The city with more than six square kilometers linked by ten kilometers of stairways, tracks, 250 artificial terraces and irrigation canals was partially hidden beneath the dense undergrowth. All roads and forest paths were designed in such a way that the locals could always hear visitors approaching.

The whole construction was carefully thought out and meticulously detailed, and whoever the designers of this place were, they were not laymen.
They gave knowledge to the locals and taught stone processing, transport and helped create level fields indispensable for cultivating on steeply graded land.

The Tairona possessed extraordinary powers of working gold, used vegetable juices for the gilding of copper and applied gold foil to objects made of bone and precious stones. Some of the world’s earliest discoveries have been made in the mountains of Northeastern Colombia and the important gold mining center of Buritaca with its deep roots in prehistory.

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“They work this gold, and have the custom of mixing it with copper and silver, and they adulterate it as much as they wish, and so it is of various purities and values,” Oviedo (1478-1557), a Spanish historian and writer wrote.

Today, the Kogi and the Sanka Indians – the remnants of the once populous Taironas – still use the stone paved roads criss-crossing the jungle but they have lost the knowledge on building with stone. Some of these routes lead to cities whose location is a closely guarded secret by the Kogi and other indigenous tribes of the region.

Also rich vegetation of Colombia prevents access to this and other mysterious lost cities of South America.

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