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The breathtaking city of Petra was a vibrant trading hub that vanished from most maps in the seventh century A.D. It lay beneath a thousand years of dust and debris when, in 1812, a Swiss scholar disguised as a Bedouin trader identified the ruins as the ancient Nabataean capital.
Spread throughout a series of remote desert canyons in southern Jordan, Petra arose more than 2,000 years ago at the crossroads of key caravan trade routes between Arabia, Syria, Palestine, and Egypt. The Nabataeans carved most of the sprawling city's buildings, including temples, tombs, and theaters, directly into the region's towering red sandstone cliffs. Here, a Bedouin walks his camel past Petra's most famous building, Al Khazneh, or the Treasury.
Browse and download images of archaeological sites from Borobudur to Istanbul.
Priceless artifacts, Nazi thefts, and Spanish shipwrecks are just the beginning in this online video series about the international debate over who owns the world's treasures.
The votes are in! Check out a new list of the world's seven greatest man-made wonders.
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