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TAC 2011 Film and Video Festival A Girl Priestess in Cahuachi

 

 

  

 

Nazca Lines    Woman in ceremonial mask    Girl priestess mummy

 

 

 

The maze-like pyramid and the geoglyphs of the Nazca Province of Peru long have been a mystery to archaeologists. This documentary, directed by Minoru Nakamura, presents the entire two-month excavation process of the pyramid in which the first ever Nazca human tomb was discovered. Beneath piles of leaves and corn cobs, three layers of bamboo floors and pacae leaves, they uncovered the mummy of a young priestess wearing a gold mask. Why would she have been entombed when all other people had been buried in simple, small holes? Perhaps she was one of the most revered prophets of her time. This discovery changes views of Cahuachi culture and suggests a new hypothesis on the research of the civilizations of South America.

 

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Length: 53 min. 
Country: Japan
Language: English
Director: Hisashi Kanamaru
Producer: Hisashi Kanamaru
Producer Web site: http://www.tbs-v.co.jp/
Distributor: Tokyo Broadcasting System Television, Inc
Distributor Web site: http://www.tbs-v.co.jp/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Machu Picchu terraces   Sculpture of Inca in ceremonial garb

Perched atop a mountain crest and mysteriously abandoned more than four centuries ago, Machu Picchu is the most famous archaeological 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 in 1911 by Hiram Bingham, archaeologists have continued to develop countless theories about this "Lost City of the Incas," yet it remains an enigma. Why was it built on such an inaccessible site? Who lived among its stone buildings, farmed its emerald green terraces, and drank from its sophisticated aqueduct system? NOVA joins a new generation of archaeologists as they probe areas of Machu Picchu that haven't been touched since the time of the Incas. See what they discover when they unearth burials of the people who built the site.

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Length: 56 min.
Country: USA
Language: English
Director: Owen Palmquist, Ricardo Preve
Producer: Owen Palmquist, Ricardo Preve
Distributor: National Geographic Television
Distributor Web site: http://www,pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/ghosts-machu-picchu.html

 

 

Festival Screenings and Awards:
Banff World Television Awards. 

 

 

TAC International Film and Video Festival

 

 

 

 

 

Horsehead Sculpture Lady with a Hood

 

 

A hundred years after being donated to the National Archaeology Museum, the world's greatest collection of prehistoric art finally was opened to the public. This collection boasts some of mankind's masterworks, the most famous being the "Lady with a Hood," a face carved in mammoth ivory over 25,000 years ago. It remains the oldest known portrait in the history of humanity. Assembled in the 19th Century by an amateur archaeologist named Edouard Piette, this collection of carvings and sculptures tells us as much about our ancestors as it does about the man who dug them out of the ground when the science of prehistory was in its infancy. Tracing the footsteps of this pioneer of prehistoric art, A Face for Prehistory takes us on a thrilling scientific and human adventure amid the wealth of new discoveries and fierce debate that characterized the late 19th Century.

 

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Length: 52 min.
Country: France
Language: English
Director: William Terver
Producer: Fabrice Coat and Christine Doublet
Distributor: Program 33
Distributor Web site: www.program33.com

 

Festival Screenings and Awards:
Broadcast on France 5, 2009; Archaeology Prize in the Archaeological Festival of Besancon, France, 2009; Jules Vernes Prize in Amiens Festival of Archaeological Film, Amiens, France; Selected for International Archaeological Film Festival of the Bidasoa, Irun, Spain, 2010. 

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