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Probe areas of Machu Picchu that haven’t been touched since the time of the Incas.
Perched atop a mountain crest, mysteriously abandoned more than
four centuries ago, Machu Picchu is the most famous archeological
ruin in the Western hemisphere and an iconic symbol of the power
and engineering prowess of the Inca. In the years since Machu
Picchu was discovered by Hiram Bingham in 1911, there have been
countless theories about this "Lost City of the Incas," yet it
remains an enigma. Why did the Incas build it on such an
inaccessible site, clinging to the steep face of a mountain? Who
lived among its stone buildings, farmed its emerald green terraces
and drank from its sophisticated aqueduct system? NOVA joins a new
generation of archeologists as they probe areas of Machu Picchu
that haven't been touched since the time of the Incas and unearth
burials of the people who built the sacred site. The program
explores the extraordinary trail of clues that began on that
fateful day in 1911 and continues to the present.