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Officials at South Bay hospital use Day of the Dead to spotlight gift of life

Officials at Valley Medical Center in San Jose use family's gift of organ donation to highlight gift of life on the "Day of the Dead."

Cultural heritage is an essential resource for climate change science, reports say

Many of the people archaeologist Dulma Karunarathna interviews in rural Sri Lanka have never been interviewed before. And many of them, representing a variety of religions and languages, tell her of the mee tree (Madhuca longifolia). The tree’s roots balance water levels and share underground nutrients with rice fields. Its flowers, seeds and bark can […]

In Peru, ancient food technologies revived in pursuit of future security

In Peru, ancient food technologies revived in pursuit of future security
mongabay.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mongabay.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Ecuador picks conservative for president; Peru sets runoff | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source

Regina Garcia Cano And Gonzalo Solano Wearing a mask and face shield, an electoral official waits for voters at a school being used as a polling station during general elections in Cuzco, Peru, Sunday, April 11, 2021. Peruvians went to the polls amid a surge in new COVID-19 infections. (AP Photo/Sharon Castellanos) April 12, 2021 - 7:23 PM QUITO, Ecuador - Ecuador will be led for the next four years by a conservative businessman after voters rebuffed a left-leaning movement that yielded an economic boom and then a recession since taking hold of the presidency last decade. That election certainty, however, did not extend to neighbouring Peru, where the presidential contest is headed to a runoff after none of the 18 candidates obtained more than 50% of the votes.

How coronavirus is threatening tourism on the road to Peru s Machu Picchu

Email Editor’s Note: This work was supported by the Emergency Fund by COVID-19 for Journalists from the National Geographic Society. Juan Yupanqui stared at a pile of mattresses, still wrapped in the plastic they came in when he bought them nearly a year ago. He wondered out loud if they would ever do more than gather dust. The mattresses were stacked in one of the round, thatched-roof guesthouses Yupanqui built last year on his homestead in Patacancha, a small village nestled more than 11,000 feet above sea level near the colonial city of Cusco, in Peru’s southern Andes. With their small windows and rustic furniture, the cabins were erected to expand his family’s experiential tourism business.

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