Pyramids
"Pyramids" is a general travel term referring to a large number of man-made structures with similar characteristics, namely, an expansive rectangular base, with sides tapering to a point above the centre of the base.
While many people usually associate them with the ancient cultures of Egypt and Central America, the pyramids, both ancient and modern, can be found at a variety of locations around the globe, including:
France
- Paris/1st arrondissement (central Paris) — the Louvre Museum is home to the most famous modern pyramid, built in glass and steel
Italy
- Rome/Aventino-Testaccio — the Italian capital has a famous steep-sided pyramid, built as an ancient cenotaph for a nobleman's tomb
Mexico
- Chichen Itza
- Palenque
- Teotihuacan — some of the largest pyramids of the world in what was once the largest city of the Pre-Columbian Americas
United States of America
- Las Vegas — a large pyramidical structure is to be found at a Las Vegas casino
- Long Beach — the gymnasium for the basketball and volleyball teams on the California State University, Long Beach campus is an impressive 18-story-tall blue pyramid
- San Francisco — the Transamerica Pyramid is an iconic skyscraper built in the shape of a very narrow pyramid
See also
- Diving the Cape Peninsula and False Bay/Pyramid Rock reef and Shark Alley — a dive site in South Africa, marked by and named for a pointed rock above it
- Pyramid Lake — a lake in the US state of Nevada, named after a pyramid-like limestone formation that emerges from its waters
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