MORE: First damage reports in Ecuador after powerful magnitude 7.5 earthquake strikes northern Peru; shaking felt as far away as Bogota, Colombia https://t.co/SKWCmj4Nrd
— BNO News (@BNONews) November 28, 2021
A magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck Peru earlier this morning. The quake was centered deep however, at over 112 km down. pic.twitter.com/yYJ2nvvTMW
— Michael Ferragamo (@FerragamoWx) November 28, 2021
Watch the waves from the M7.5 earthquake in Peru roll across seismic stations in North America. (THREAD) pic.twitter.com/J7UnpyyWAF
— IRIS Earthquake Sci (@IRIS_EPO) November 28, 2021
Regional tectonics are dominated by subduction of the oceanic Nazca Plate beneath the continental South American Plate which produced both the 5,900-km-long Peru-Chile Trench that extends from Colombia to southern Chile, and the arc of active volcanoes parallel to the trench. pic.twitter.com/ij9jRIkNbF
— IRIS Earthquake Sci (@IRIS_EPO) November 28, 2021
So we know what caused that 7.5 earthquake there today ... #peru #earthquake https://t.co/YYOiyztZf6
— Rishi (@RishJ01) November 28, 2021
Men dig up a mummy in Peru and get hit with a 7.5 earthquake the next day?
— Rob-21 (@RobStar07) November 28, 2021
Cool, cool. pic.twitter.com/G2pL8fzdp3
Leave the…
— Tiny Ram-Man (@TinyRammer) November 28, 2021
I pause here, clear my throat, and loudly repeat for emphasis
LEAVE THE 800-YEAR-OLD ROPE-BOUND MUMMY ALONE. https://t.co/vYeKeElhl1
https://t.co/cyKogpKJXm Archaeologists Discover 800-year-old Rope-bound Mummy in Peru https://t.co/BxwSXd9LM0 pic.twitter.com/bjI4tKhyjv
— Billy Carson II (@4biddnKnowledge) November 28, 2021
Archaeologists have hailed a latest discovery in Peru as possibly the most exciting find of the decade. An almost perfectly well preserved mummy estimated to be almost 800 years old has been discovered there.@MollyGambhir tells you more
— WION (@WIONews) November 28, 2021
Watch more: https://t.co/AXC5qRugeb pic.twitter.com/k39FETwmYE
Archaeologists have found a mummy in good condition and with its hands covering its face in a large pre-Inca area south of Lima, Peru on Sunday.
— The Voice of America (@VOANews) November 29, 2021
Archaeologists believe that the mummy dates between 800 and 1,200 years AC and is from the pre-Inca Wari or Chaclla culture.
(AP) pic.twitter.com/ZlQzF3He8p
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