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Osimiri Côa

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Rio Côa Castelo Bom.

ike Côa ( <Mkpọ okwu Portuguese: [ ˈkoɐ ]/link> ) bụ isi iyi nke osimiri Douro, nke dị na etiti na igwu egwuregwu Portugal .  [1] [2] Ọ bụ otu n'ime osimiri Portuguese ole na ole na-awụga na ndịda ruo n'ebe ugwu.  Ọ na-agafe na obodo Sabugal, Almeida, Pinhel, Figueira de Castelo Rodrigo na Vila Nova de Foz Côa, ha niile dị na mpaghara Guarda .  [3] Ihe ụmụaka 100,000 ha (247,105 acres) nke ala dị na Greater Côa Valley polisala maka ọgwụgwọ na nchekwa dị ka mpaghara Natura 2000 [1]

Achọpụtara puku kwuru puku ihe ndị ọrụ ochie na Ndagwurugwu Côa na 1980 na 1990. Ndị a bụ ihe na-ahịkọ ihikọ n'ihi foto elu nke nkà Paleolithic, na n'ihi na a na-ahụ ihe ndị ọrụ ndị a n'akụkọ n'ihi  'ọgba, n'elu dị nkume: Jean Clottes, onye French prehistorian a ma ama, na "bụ nnukwu oghere ikuku nke paleolithic. nka na Europe, ma ọ bụrụ na ọ bụghị n'ụwa."  Nchọpụta ndị sochirinụ ebutela ekerera na foto ndị dị n'ebe ahụ bụ nke otu abụọ: ọnụ ọgụgụ Gravetti a na-ahụ anya nke ukwuu na ihe ọrụ Magdalenia na-ahụ ahụ anya.. [2]

Eserese ndị a dọtara uche zuru ụwa ọnụ mgbe, iwu mmiri mmiri ọkụ n'ofe ihe Côa na-eyi egwu ọkụnye ha.  Ọ bụ ebe na ọkụ eletrọnịlị nke ọma, mkpu sitere n'aka ndị obodo, ndị na-akpa mbọ na ụlọ ọrụ mgbasa ozi mere ka a ọrụ ọrụ mmiri na 1995 mgbe mkpebi mfe mba ahụ mgbe njikere aka ebere.  dị mfe ama nke ụzọ na mpaghara Canada do Inferno adịlarị n'okpuru mmiri n'oge ahụ.  Ogige ihe ochie nke Côa Valley, nke meghere na 1996, ka ekwuputara dịka ebe nchekwa ụwa nke UNESCO ngwa na 1998 [3]

Pịa Côa bụkwa ebe a na-alụ agha Côa n'oge Agha Peninsular.   [7] Were ụlọ n'ụdị Terrace of Riba-Côa, dị ka Castle of Sabugal na Castle nke Pinhel [4]

Ntụaka

[dezie | dezie ebe o si]
  1. Greater Côa Valley. Rewilding Europe. Retrieved on 31 May 2022.
  2. Bahn (30 November 2015). "Open-air Ice Age art: The history and reluctant acceptance of an unexpected phenomenon", in Bueno-Ramírez: Prehistoric Art as Prehistoric Culture: Studies in Honour of Professor Rodrigo de Balbín-Behrmann (in en). Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 79–92. ISBN 978-1-78491-223-9. Retrieved on 31 May 2022. 
  3. Portuguese Tourist Office (2014). World Heritage Sites in Portugal: Foz Coa. Manor Houses of Portugal. Retrieved on 6 October 2014.
  4. Evans (2004). Cadogan Guides Portugal (in en). Cadogan Guides. ISBN 978-1-86011-126-6.