Bolivia
Sucre Tours
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Things to Do in Sucre
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Cal Orck'o: The Dinosaur Wall at the Edge of Time
A 1.5km limestone wall rising 100m displays over 12,000 footprints from 68 million years ago. Discovered in 1994, the site preserves tracks from eight dinosaur species, including a 347m juvenile T-rex trail — the longest ever recorded. Parallel ankylosaur prints suggest rare social behavior.
Maragua Crater & Inca Trail
Trek ancient Inca pathways into Maragua Crater, where rainbow sediment layers formed over millions of years. The route descends through Jalq'a weaving villages past cave paintings, dinosaur footprints at Niñu Mayu, and Garganta del Diablo's 40m cascade, all within a single day's walk.
Jalq'a Textile Weaving
Visit Jalq'a weavers creating the only textiles depicting "ukhu pacha" — a chaotic underworld of mythical khurus. Black and red threads become winged mammals and multi-headed beasts. This nearly lost tradition, revived since 1986 through ASUR, now supports over 800 female weavers.
Tarabuco Market & Yampara
Journey 65km southeast to the Sunday market where Yampara people have traded for centuries. Villagers arrive in traditional ponchos and shawls to sell handwoven textiles and sample chicha. The annual Pujllay festival each March, a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage, commemorates their history.
Casa de la Libertad: Birthplace of Bolivia
On August 6, 1825, representatives signed Bolivia's declaration of independence in this former Jesuit chapel on Plaza 25 de Mayo. The original document remains on display alongside the cracked bell rung on May 25, 1809, when independence first erupted. Guided tours bring the history to life.
Colonial Rooftops & Sacred Art: San Felipe Neri
Climb the 17th-century Convento de San Felipe Neri to a rooftop where monks once meditated above the White City. The 360-degree panorama reveals whitewashed facades, terracotta rooftops, and bell towers against Andean hills. Inside, a Last Supper painting features indigenous elements.
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