The red clay formations called Las Médulas owe their angular character not to the shaping hands of nature but to those of gold miners—and not grizzled "49ers in grubby flannel and overalls, but 1st-century excavators clad in tattered tunics. When gold seams were discovered here in what"s now northern Spain, the Romans who controlled the region created a clever system of tunnels and canals under the hills, through which they channeled water from nearby streams to build pressure that cracked away huge chunks of clay.
There was gold in them there hills…
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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National Bison Month
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High above the reef
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Bản Giốc–Detian Falls, Vietnam
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Via Krupp, Capri, Italy
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To Sua Ocean Trench
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St. Patricks Day in County Waterford, Ireland
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47 years of Badlands National Park
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One for the books
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An aviation celebration
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Looking back at Yellowstone, 30 years after the fires
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Engineering an artificial harbor in Normandy
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An impactful day
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Fibonacci Day
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Go with the rainbow flow
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Borovets ski resort in Bulgaria
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Cousins Day
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Glendurgan Garden hedge maze is 186 years old
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Saffron in bloom
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An ice cap-puccino
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A stunning national park in winter white
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Indigenous living
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World Population Day
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Jerte Valley in bloom
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Let s run em up!
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It s not always sunny in Abu Simbel…
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Gifford Pinchot National Forest
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International Day for Monuments and Sites
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Old underground cellar, Bavaria, Germany
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Independence Day of the Bahamas
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A bite of ancient history
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

