Pyramids
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Revision as of 10:31, 6 June 2007
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This article is a disambiguation page. If you arrived here by following a link from another page you can help by correcting it, so that it points to the appropriate disambiguated page.
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Pyramids is a general travel term referring to a large number of man-made structures with similar characteristics, namely, an expansive rectangular base, with sides tapering to a point above the centre of the base. Pyramids are targets for travellers on a number of grounds:
- their large size (generally)
- their historical and cultural importance
Pyramids can be found at a variety of locations around the globe, some of which are:
The Great Pyramid and the Sphinx
- Egypt - pyramids in the lower Nile Valley were built as tombs for the pharaohs during the early high points of Egyptian civilisation
El Castillo - Chichen Itza
- Mexico - Mexican pyramids are generally the pyramid-shaped temples of the historical Mayan and Aztec cultures
- France
- central Paris - the Louvre Museum is home to the most famous modern pyramid, built in glass and steel
- Italy
- Rome - the Italian capital has a famous, steep-sided pyramid, built as an ancient cenotaph for a nobleman's tomb
- the United States of America
- Las Vegas - a large pyramidical structure is to be found at a Las Vegas casino
- Long Beach - the gymnasium for the baskeball and volleyball teams on the California State University, Long Beach campus is an impressive 18-story-tall blue pyramid
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