Assisi. Foro Romano - Roman Forum I (Museo Archeologico)
First virtual travel in the roman city of Assisi. Today we visit the roman 'Foro' under the medieval Public square of the Municipality. Cripta of S. Nicolò, attended from S. Francesco, now is used as Archaeological Museum: It occupies the ancient roman shops (tabernae). A tunnel leaves from Cripta and crosses the roman 'Foro'.
Primo viaggio virtuale nella città romana di Assisi. Oggi visitiamo il 'Foro' romano, posizionato sotto la medievale Piazza del Comune. Da via Portica entriamo nella Cripta di S. Nicolò, già frequentata da S. Francesco e ora adibita a Museo Archeologico. Dalla Cripta passiamo nel tunnel che attraversa il 'Foro' Romano. Ricostruzioni con Cinema 4D.
Places to see in ( Assisi - Italy ) Museo e Foro Romano
Places to see in ( Assisi - Italy ) Museo e Foro Romano
Next to the traditional image of a medieval Assisi, linked to the figure of St. Francis, there is that of a Roman Assisi, equally interesting, which has involved the Superintendence for the Archaeological Heritage of Umbria in its research and protection tasks. Assisi passed under the Roman sphere of influence from the III century BC for a treaty that committed it to provide military contingents and in 90 BC it became a municipality. Part of the territory, after 41 BC was confiscated and assigned to the nearby Spello. In the same years Assisi gave birth to Properzio, one of the greatest elegiac poets of the time. The archaeological collection belonging to the town hall is located in the Museum of the Roman Forum, partly housed in the crypt of San Nicolò but which extends over the surface under the square.
The first nucleus of the collection dates back to 1790-1794, when about 40 Roman inscriptions coming from the city were exhibited inside the colonnade of the temple of Minerva. Further acquisitions took place from 1826 up to the first decades of the twentieth century by the Accademia properziana and first by donations from private individuals. The increase of objects forced to bring a part in some rooms of the Commune, until in 1890 the entire collection was placed in the Convent of St. Anthony of Padua. The establishment of a real civic museum dates back to 1904. In 1934 there was the transfer of the objects to the crypt of San Nicolò, which for the occasion was fully arranged and connected to the archaeological area below the Piazza del Comune.
The term forum refers to the space intended for civil and religious events, to the exchange of businesses, meetings, debates ... which in Assisi coincided with part of the southern terrace, including the temple and a surrounding sacred area. The visitor has to make a small effort of imagination in conceiving the structure, as what was done in the first century BC, today it is partly underground at the Piazza del Comune: in the municipal age, in fact, it was decided to cover the remains of the ancient Roman city and build a new city center.
( Assisi - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Assisi . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Assisi - Italy
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Assisi, Italy 2019 Walking Tour (4K/60fps)
WALKING IN ASSISI, ITALY: Enjoy a tour of Assisi, Italy, a place of pilgrimage for thousands every year who come to see the medieval birthplace of Italy’s patron saint, Saint Francis. This walk was filmed on Tuesday July 2nd, 2019 starting at 11:52 am. Let's go for a walk! ????For an even more immersive experience, be sure to put on your headphones and listen in 3D audio.
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00:14 - Map of the walk
00:55 - Drone footage
01:44 - Walk begins at Porta San Pietro
05:04 - Popular building and street scene
06:44 - Lower Piazza of the Basilica of Saint Francis
08:45 - Lower Basilica
11:20 - Upper Piazza of the Basilica of Saint Francis
11:52 - Upper Basilica
13:24 - Garden of Saint Francis Entrance
15:54 - Scenic Viewpoint and Church of Saint Margaret
19:41 - View of Porta San Giacomo
22:28 - Piazzetta Armanni (Scenic Viewpoint)
26:26 - Church of Santo Stefano
32:04 - Piazza del Comune
32:48 - Temple of Minerva (Church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva)
35:52 - Volta Pinta
37:10 - Fountain of the Piazza del Comune
39:03 - Chiesa Nuova
42:20 - Roman Gate
43:22 - Basilica di Santa Chiara
44:15 - View of the Assisi valley
50:14 - Piazza San Rufino
50:48 - Cathedral of San Rufino
58:05 - Climb up to the Bell Tower (Campanile)
1:05:45 - Fountain of Piazza San Rufino
1:06:00 - Via Porta Perlici
1:06:56 - Via Montecavallo (Beautiful housing district)
1:10:36 - Popular Photo Spot
1:12:46 - Roman Amphitheater
1:19:15 - Beautiful street view
1:22:04 - Porta Perlici
1:23:09 - Flower entrance ....and RAT! :)
1:25:43 - Via Porta Perlici Gate entrance
1:30:36 - Piazza San Rufino
1:31:44 - Walk down Via San Rufino towards Piazza del Comune
1:33:50 - Piazza del Comune
1:35:42 - Roman Forum and Archaeological Museum (Assisi Underground)
1:43:32 - Exit the Assisi Underground
1:52:30 - Basilica of San Francesco d'Assisi
1:56:40 - Porta San Francesco
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Rome: Ancient Glory
Rick Steves' Europe Travel Guide | Part one of three shows on the Eternal City, this episode resurrects the rubble and brings back to life the capital of the ancient world. Focusing on the grandeur of classical Rome, we'll admire the groundbreaking architecture at the Colosseum and Pantheon, and the empire's exquisite art at the Capitoline Museum. Then we'll head out on a bike ride along the ancient Appian Way and take in nearby marvels of Roman engineering.
© 2012 Rick Steves' Europe
Rome, Italy: National Museum
More info about travel to Rome: A visit to Rome's National Museum at the Palazzo Massimo helps humanize the ancient Roman empire. The museum's collection tells the empire's story through art, and many aspects of ancient Roman life are represented.
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PALATINO E FORO ROMANO, ROMA, ITALY (2 of 2)
PARTE 2 DI 2 / PART 2 OF 2.
AREA ARCHEOLOGICA DEL PALATINO E DEL FORO ROMANO / ARCHAEOLOGICAL ZONE OF PALATINE HILL AND ROMAN FORUM.
Il Palatino è uno dei sette colli di Roma situato tra il Velabro e il Foro Romano ed è una delle parti più antiche della città dove sorgevano i palazzi imperiali. Il sito è ora un grande museo all'aperto e può essere visitato: l'ingresso si trova in via S.Gregorio, oppure si può salire sul Palatino entrando nel Foro Romano e poi salendo per il Clivio Palatino a destra dell'Arco di Tito. Il Foro Romano (Forum Romanum, sebbene i Romani si riferissero a esso più spesso come Forum Magnum, o semplicemente Forum) era situato nella valle compresa tra il Palatino e il Campidoglio e costituì il centro commerciale, religioso e politico della città di Roma. La sistemazione definitiva dei Fori, avviata da Cesare, venne completata sotto Augusto: la piazza assunse una maggiore regolarità con la costruzione delle due grandi basiliche (Emilia e Giulia) sui lati lunghi, i nuovi Rostra sul lato della piazza in direzione del Campidoglio e il nuovo tempio del Divo Giulio, dedicato nel 29 a.C. da Augusto dopo la morte e la divinizzazione di Cesare. Il lato breve a sud-ovest del Foro si trovò a essere sistemato col tempio del Divo Giulio incorniciato dall'arco partico di Augusto e dal portichetto dell'Arco di Gaio e Lucio Cesari, escludendo alla vista i venerandi monumenti della Regia e del tempio di Vesta. Questa scelta va inquadrata nel periodo cesariano della politica di Augusto, prima della più prudente fase della restaurazione conservatrice. A questa nuova fase edilizia imperiale sono da ricondurre anche le ricostruzioni dei templi della Concordia, rifatto da Tiberio nel 10 a.C. quasi a voler cancellare i segni della passata stagione delle guerre civili, e dei Castori (7 a.C.) di dimensioni grandiose e da mettere in relazioni con i fratelli Tiberio e Druso in parallelo con i mitici fratelli Dioscuri. Al 2 d.C. risale l'iscrizione dedicatoria per Lucio Cesare, figlio ed erede designato di Augusto, posta a un'estremità della Basilica Emilia: i portici antistanti la basilica stessa erano infatti stati dedicati a Lucio e al fratello Gaio Cesare. Alla fine la piazza ricostruita traboccava di edifici legati nel nome, nella simbologia e nel sovvenzionamento dei restauri alla Gens Iulia. Fotografie scattate il 6 e 7 aprile 2013.
Naples and Pompeii
Rick Steves' Europe Travel Guide | In gritty Naples, we go shopping Neapolitan style, dodge scooters in Naples' crazy traffic, explore the city's vibrant neighborhoods, admire exquisite ancient mosaics at the National Museum of Archaeology, taste pizza in its birthplace, climb the lip of Mount Vesuvius, and wander the amazing ruins of the Roman town it destroyed: Pompeii. © 2006 Rick Steves' Europe
LE NOSTRE VESTALI AL FORO ROMANO - OUR VESTALS AT THE FORO ROMANO
Dopo 20 anni di lavori di restauro riapre la Casa delle Vestali nel Foro Romano e per sottolineare questo evento siamo stati autorizzati dalla Soprintendenza a portare le nostre 6 vestali e alcuni senatori nella Casa delle Vestali al Foro. Un evento senza precedenti da quando nel 394 d.C. l'imperatore Teodosio chiuse per sempre il Tempio di Vesta... - After 20 years of restoration works the House of Vestals in the Foro Romano is open to the public once again and to underline this event we've been allowed by the Archaeological Survey Office to take our 6 vestals and some senators inside the House of Vestals. An event never seen before, since 394 A.D. when the emperor Theodosius closed the Temple and dismissed the Vestals...
The roman villa at Sant'Anna Spello (Umbria, Italy). The room with the head of Medusa.
Mosaics and frescoes reconstructed in 3D. The panel in the Archaeological Museum of Perugia. Original music by Giovanni Cipiciani. The room with the head of Medusa: from the excavation to the relief and the enhancement of archaeological site.
Villa Romana a Spello, in località Sant' Anna (Umbria, Italia). Mosaici e affreschi ricostruiti in 3D. Il pannello nel Museo Archeologico di Perugia. Musiche originali di Giovanni Cipiciani. Il vano con la testa di Medusa: dallo scavo, al rilievo alla valorizzazione.
Assisi. Anfiteatro Romano. Anteprima. - Roman Amphitheatre. Preview
Anteprima del nuovo Video in 3D sulla città romana di Assisi. Il Movie percorre in lungo e in largo, dentro e fuori, sia l'Anfiteatro che il Circo romano.
Preview of the new 3D Video on the Roman city of Assisi. The film wanders in the Roman Amphitheatre and Circus.
The Wolf and Twins Sculpture - Myth at the Heart of the Roman Empire (4/7)
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How this statue embodies the beginnings of the illustrious history of the Roman Empire.
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Places to see in ( Spoleto - Italy )
Places to see in ( Spoleto - Italy )
Spoleto is a city in Umbria, Italy. It’s surrounded by hills, olive groves and vineyards. Dating from the 12th century, Spoleto Cathedral has a porticoed facade embellished by a mosaic. Inside is a cycle of frescoes by the medieval artist Filippo Lippi. The National Archaeological Museum complex displays items from the Bronze Age and Roman times. It also includes the restored Roman Theater.
Presided over by a formidable medieval fortress and backed by the broad-shouldered Apennines, their summits iced with snow in winter, Spoleto is visually stunning. The hill town is also something of a historical picnic: the Romans left their mark in the form of grand arches and an amphitheatre; and the Lombards made it the capital of their duchy in 570, building it high and mighty and leaving it with a parting gift of a Romanesque cathedral in the early 13th century. Today, the town has winged its way into the limelight with its mammoth Spoleto Festival (Festival dei Due Mondi) a 17-day summer feast of opera, dance, music and art.
Spoleto (Latin Spoletium) is an ancient city in the Italian province of Perugia in east-central Umbria on a foothill of the Apennines. It is 20 km (12 mi) S. of Trevi, 29 km (18 mi) N. of Terni, 63 km (39 mi) SE of Perugia; 212 km (132 mi) SE of Florence; and 126 km (78 mi) N of Rome. Spoleto was situated on the eastern branch of the Via Flaminia, which forked into two roads at Narni and rejoined at Forum Flaminii, near Foligno. An ancient road also ran hence to Nursia. The Ponte Sanguinario of the 1st century BC still exists. The Forum lies under today's marketplace. Located at the head of a large, broad valley, surrounded by mountains, Spoleto has long occupied a strategic geographical position. It appears to have been an important town to the original Umbri tribes, who built walls around their settlement in the 5th century BC, some of which are visible today.
Under the empire it seems to have flourished once again, but is not often mentioned in history. Martial speaks of its wine. Aemilianus, who had been proclaimed emperor by his soldiers in Moesia, was slain by them here on his way from Rome (AD 253), after a reign of three or four months. Rescripts of Constantine (326) and Julian (362) are dated from Spoleto. The foundation of the episcopal see dates from the 4th century: early martyrs of Spoleto are legends, but a letter to the bishop Caecilianus, from Pope Liberius in 354 constitutes its first historical mention. Owing to its elevated position Spoleto was an important stronghold during the Vandal and Gothic wars; its walls were dismantled by Totila.
The Festival dei Due Mondi (Festival of the Two Worlds) was founded in 1958. Because Spoleto was a small town, where real estate and other goods and services were at the time relatively inexpensive, and also because there are two indoor theatres, a Roman theatre and many other spaces, it was chosen by Gian Carlo Menotti as the venue for an arts festival. It is also fairly close to Rome, with good rail connections. It is an important cultural event, held annually in late June-early July.
The Roman theater, largely rebuilt. The stage is occupied by the former church of St. Agatha, currently housing the National Archaeological Museum. Ponte Sanguinario (bloody bridge), a Roman bridge 1st century BCE. restored Roman house with mosaic floors, indicating it was built in the 1st century, and overlooked the Forum Square.
Ponte delle Torri, a striking 13th-century aqueduct, The majestic Rocca Albornoziana fortress, built in 1359–1370 by the architect Matteo Gattapone of Gubbio for Cardinal Albornoz. The Palazzo Racani-Arroni (16th century) has a worn graffito decoration attributed to Giulio Romano. Palazzo della Signoria (14th century), housing the city's museum. The majestic Palazzo Vigili (15th-16th centuries) includes the Torre dell'Olio (13th century), the sole mediaeval city tower remaining in Spoleto. Temple of Clitumnus lies between Spoleto and Trevi
( Spoleto - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Spoleto . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Spoleto - Italy
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360 / VR 4K Palatine Hill Tour (No Comments) - Rome, Italy
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Central Italy: Medieval Hill Towns
More info about travel to Italy: Siena, Assisi, Volterra, and San Marino serve as four great examples of medieval Italy. Each place has a unique charm and draws tourists from all over the world.
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2000 YEAR OLD ROOM WITH FRESCOES DISCOVERED IN CENTRAL ROME, ITALY
2000-YEAR-OLD ROOM WITH FRESCOES DISCOVERED IN CENTRAL ROME, ITALY
A 2000-year-old room plastered with frescoes was accidentally discovered during routine roadworks to install a gas pipeline under a busy street in central Rome, Italy.
The find was made in the middle of November, when workmen started to dig a hole for the pipeline in Via Alfonso Lamora.
As they began to remove pieces of earth from the road, a large chasm opened up in the road extending down into the dark, four meters below.
A 2000-year old frescoed room has been discovered under a busy Roman street. Photo:Archaeological Superintendency Rome
At first, the workmen thought it was an ordinary sinkhole and called in speleologists – or cave experts – to investigate. However, when the experts reached the bottom of the large cavern they were surprised to find themselves standing in the frescoed room of a once luxurious Roman home.
The partial discovery of the room has excited archaeologists who have dated the find to the first century AD, based on the depth at which it was found and the pictures speleologists took of the frescoes.
“Finding a room under the street is rare,” the archaeologist responsible for the newly discovered site, Mirella Serlorenzi, told The Local.
“We do get archaeological finds from between 60 and 50 percent of all roadworks though.”
The area around the site once belonged to the luxurious Emperor’s gardens known as the Horti Lamiani (Lamian Gardens), which is the place where Julius Ceasar was partially cremated and buried.
In the first century AD the area comprised a complex of luxurious villas, gardens and pavilions. Archaeologists are hoping the new find will prove to be of considerable historical interest.
The Horti Lamiani were a set of gardens located atop the Esquiline Hill in Rome, in the area around the present Piazza Vittorio Emanuele. They were based on the gardens of the consul Lucius Aelius Lamia, a friend of Tiberius, and the Horti Lamiani soon (based on the time of Caligula) became part of the imperial property.
“Digs took place in the area of the Horti Lamiani at the beginning of the 1900s during some building work,” explained Serlorenzi. “They turned up many incredible statues and sculptures which you can find in the city’s museums today.”
“Obviously, we have very few details at the moment but we know about the area and these finds can now be fully investigated,” she added.
This is not the only exciting find in the capital this year: a perfectly preserved example of a Roman domus was unearthed under the city center in September.
While such finds may be exciting for history buffs and archaeologists, their frequency poses a headache to archaeologists who need to find a way of performing digs while letting roadworks – not to mention busy Roman life – continue around them.
“Blocking the traffic in a busy Roman street around Christmas isn’t really ideal,” Serlorenzi lamented.
“But by now we Roman archaeologists are used to working as quickly as possible.”
The Sphinx at 8am Walking Tour (4K/60fps)
Walk through the Valley Temple to the Great Sphinx at 8am with no crowds. This walk was filmed on January 20th, 2019. You will get as close as a tourist can get to the Great Sphinx and see it without having to look past other tourists. After walking around the Sphinx, continue up Khafre's Causeway toward Khafre's Pyramid. If you have any questions or need help planning your trip, feel free to send an e-mail to TRAVEL@PROWALKS.COM.
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You can find travel tips anywhere, but here are a few of my own:
1) Take an Uber to get there or get a airbnb right next to the Sphinx entrance.
2) Do not enter the Pyramid Complex by the Khufu Pyramid. Go early and enter at the Sphinx.
3) When you walk in, there is a wall that separates the road from the interior grounds. You are free to climb over the wall. You are essentially free to roam and walk wherever you want.
4) The cost of a camel ride should be about $5. Some places will try to charge you $50 per person...or more. The cost of a horse cart ride is also cheap but DECIDE ON A PRICE FIRST. Do not get on a camel or cart unless you have first determined a price. You should be able to take a horse cart ride from Sphinx to the scenic viewpoint for $5 or less.
5) Learn a few helpful phrases...but around the Pyramids, learn to say Moshayes which means I don't want it. You will be harassed a lot while you are there...but they are just trying to make a living.
6) You DO NOT need to give you ticket to anyone when inside the complex. You will be approached by guys saying they need your ticket and that they are a guide that is part of your ticket price. They are just trying to get you to pay them for their service. Keep your ticket....and say Moshayes.
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▼▼Video Timeline Links▼▼
00:20 - Map of the walk
00:44 - Walk begins near the entrance
03:38 - Temple of the Sphinx
05:07 - Valley Temple of Khafre
07:25 - The Great Sphinx
15:23 - Khafre Causeway
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Antica città romana di Luni
Video of Vittorio Innocente - Luni, the fraction of the City of Ortonovo in the province of La Spezia, is known for being the ancient Roman colony of Luna where today stands the Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Luni. Well-preserved floor of a stately home decorated with mosaics. The archaeological site includes several public areas of the city such as the Roman Forum, the Capitoline area and decumannus, the civil Basilica, the Curia and the cardo maximus, the Great Temple, and some mansions (House of the Mosaics, Domus Northern Domus Frescoes). Even the remains of the Roman Amphitheatre of Luni, placed outside the ancient city walls, are included in the archaeological area.
Video di Vittorio Innocente - Luni, la frazione del Comune di Ortonovo in provincia della Spezia, è nota per essere stata l'antica colonia romana di Luna dove oggi sorge il Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Luni. Ben conservata la pavimentazione di una dimora signorile realizzata con mosaici. L'area archeologica comprende diverse aree pubbliche della città romana quali il foro, l'area capitolina e il decumano massimo, la Basilica civile, la curia e il cardine massimo, il Grande Tempio e alcune dimore signorili (Domus dei Mosaici, Domus Settentrionale, Domus degli Affreschi). Anche i resti dell'Anfiteatro romano di Luni, posto al di fuori dell'antica cinta muraria, sono inclusi nell'area archeologica.
Travel to create lifetime memories of the best of ancient Italy
Explore the dramatic stories of the Roman Empire in a
special tour of ancient Rome and southern Italy with Internationally renowned
anthropologist Dr. Estelle Lazer, author of Resurrecting Pompeii. Estelle
designed this tour for the traveler who wants to experience the best of Roman
history and culture in an intimate group. You will get up close and personal with
the great personalities of the ancient world including natural historian Pliny the
Elder, the aloof Emperor Tiberius, the infamous Nero and his insatiable wife
Poppaea. Guests are invited to stay an extra three days to get to explore Rome
and Tivoli in detail with University of Chicago trained art expert Joana Konova.
ITALY - WikiVidi Documentary
Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a unitary parliamentary republic in Europe. Located in the heart of the Mediterranean Sea, Italy shares open land borders with France, Switzerland, Austria, Slovenia, San Marino and Vatican City. Italy covers an area of 301338 km2 and has a largely temperate seasonal and Mediterranean climate. Due to its shape, it is often referred to in Italy as lo Stivale . With around 61 million inhabitants it is the fourth most populous EU member state. Since classical times, ancient Phoenicians, Carthaginians and Greeks established settlements in the south of Italy, with Etruscans and Celts inhabiting the centre and the north of Italy respectively and various different ancient Italian tribes and Italic peoples dispersed throughout the Italian Peninsula and insular Italy. The Italic tribe known as the Latins formed the Roman Kingdom, which eventually became a republic that conquered and assimilated other nearby civilisations. Ultimately the Roman Empire...
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Shortcuts to chapters:
00:06:58: Etymology
00:08:21: Prehistory and antiquity
00:09:56: Ancient Rome
00:12:15: Middle Ages
00:15:22: Early Modern
00:20:37: Italian unification
00:24:54: Fascist regime
00:28:55: Republican Italy
00:34:17: Geography
00:36:51: Volcanology
00:38:17: Environment
00:41:15: Fauna and flora
00:43:46: Climate
00:45:03: Politics
00:45:49: Government
00:48:58: Law and criminal justice
00:50:38: Law enforcement
00:51:42: Foreign relations
00:54:16: Military
00:57:10: Administrative divisions
00:57:39: Economy
01:03:20: Agriculture
01:05:01: Infrastructure
01:07:30: Science and technology
01:11:04: Tourism
01:12:41: Demographics
01:15:20: Immigration
01:17:44: Languages
01:19:42: Religion
01:23:32: Education
01:25:35: Health
01:27:25: Culture
01:28:29: Architecture
01:30:22: Visual art
01:34:52: Literature and theatre
01:42:40: Music
01:46:54: Cinema
01:50:44: Sport
01:54:47: Fashion and design
01:56:51: Cuisine
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Paestum, Italy Virtual Walking Tour
Walk through the ruins of the ancient Greek city of Paestum. The ruins include three ancient Greek temples dating from 600 to 450 BC. The entire city covered almost 300 acres of which only 60 acres has been excavated.
Time: 1 Hour
Distance: 3 Miles
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