The Nazca lines aren't a puzzle to be solved—they’re a heartfelt plea for life, a giant prayer written into the earth itself to communicate with the forces that controlled their survival.
Create a short podcast with two speakers (host and tourist). Topic: Nazca Lines and John Reinhard’s theory. Explain simply how the lines were made, their purpose, and Reinhard’s idea linking them to water, mountains, and ritual paths. Use simple English, short sentences, reactions, and avoid speculation.


Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

Nia: You know, Eli, I was looking at photos of the Peruvian desert, and it’s just miles of dry sand. But then, you see these massive shapes—monkeys, spiders, even a hummingbird nearly 275 meters long!
Eli: It’s incredible. People often think you can only see them from a plane, but you can actually spot them from the nearby hills too.
Nia: Wow, really? I always pictured them as some big mystery that stayed hidden for centuries.
Eli: Well, they were created by the Nazca culture over 1,500 years ago, and they’ve stayed sharp because it almost never rains there. But the most surprising part isn't how big they are—it's how simply they were made. They didn't need high-tech tools; they just moved rocks.
Nia: That makes sense, but it sounds like a lot of work! Let’s explore how they actually etched these giant pictures into the ground.