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  • A man leads his mule, loaded with supplies purchased in Cuzco, through a blizzard and over a high pass enroute to the extant Quechua-speaking Incan village of Q'eros in the Peruvian Andes on September 14, 2005.
    050914_8840.JPG
  • Peruvian schoolchildren on a field trip travel crowded in the back of trucks to historical Inca sites around the Sacred Valley.
    050922_9723.JPG
  • A Q'eros elder stands in the mist wearing traditional alpaca wool clothing and embroidery outside Q'eros in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 15, 2005. The Q'eros, a traditional Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas.
    050915_9034.JPG
  • A man leads his mule, loaded with supplies purchased in Cuzco, through a blizzard and over a high pass enroute to the extant Quechua-speaking Incan village of Q'eros in the Peruvian Andes on September 14, 2005.
    050914_8841.JPG
  • The teacher writes out a Spanish lesson on the blackboard in the small elementary school in Q'eros, Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 15, 2005. The students are taught in both their native Quechua and Spanish, the official language of Peru. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050915_8963.JPG
  • A woman, spinning alpaca wool, poses with her daughter  on the trail to Q'eros in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 15, 2005. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050915_8951.JPG
  • Yuri, a young Peruvian guide from Cuzco, struggles through a blizzard and over a high pass enroute to the village of Q'eros in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 14, 2005.
    050914_8843.JPG
  • The son of a coca farmer sits outside his home in the upper valley of the Madre de Dios River in the Peruvian Amazon on September 3, 2005.
    050903_7561.JPG
  • Students wait around while the teacher attends to younger children in the small elementary school in Q'eros, Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 15, 2005. The students are taught in both their native Quechua and Spanish, the official language of Peru. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050915_9015.JPG
  • A man huddles around a piece of stewed alpaca meat inside a home in the herding village of the Q'eros, Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 14, 2005. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050914_8909.JPG
  • A 5th grade student waits while the teacher attends to the younger students inside the small elementary school in Q'eros, Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru. Spanish sentences are visible on the blackboard behind him. Lessons are taught in both native Quechua and Spanish, the official language of Peru.
    050915_9026.JPG
  • A poster in Spanish describing the rights of the child hangs inside the small elementary school in Q'eros, Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru. The students are taught in both their native Quechua and Spanish, the official language of Peru.
    050915_9024.JPG
  • Three boys in red Catholic school uniforms sit together on stairs under a blue door in Paucartambo, Peru.
    050902_7425.JPG
  • Guinea pigs press up against the fence of their pen at a restaurant in Pisac, Peru on September 23, 2005. The guinea pig is the culinary specialty of Peru.
    050923_9867.JPG
  • A traditionally dressed Andean family relaxes among the ruins of the Inca fortress at Ollantaytambo, Sacred Valley, Peru on September 23, 2005.
    050923_9827.JPG
  • Guinea pigs in an enclosure at a restaurant in Pisac, Peru, where they are a culinary specialty.
    050923_9868.JPG
  • The teacher writes out a Spanish lesson on the blackboard in the small elementary school in Q'eros, Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru. The students are taught in both their native Quechua and Spanish, the official language of Peru.
    050915_8961.JPG
  • An elderly shopkeeper waits for customers at the river settlement of Boca Manu, deep inside the Manu National Park Cultural Zone, Peru.
    050906_8172.JPG
  • A group of porters sit and rest together on a hillside along the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu, Peru.
    050920_9307.JPG
  • Schoolchildren on a field trip peer out the back of a truck as they travel to historical Inca sites around the Sacred Valley and Cuzco, Peru on September 22, 2005.
    050922_9720.JPG
  • Yuri, a young Peruvian guide from Cuzco, hikes on an ancient footpath, past large agave plants, enroute to the village of Q'eros in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru.
    050915_8953.JPG
  • A canvas sac overflows with piles of small potatoes stored in a small, dark hut in the alpaca herding village of the Q'eros people in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of their ancient traditions.
    050914_8873.JPG
  • A larger thatch roof stone structure in the traditional village of the Q'eros, high in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of their ancient traditions.
    050915_8974.JPG
  • Two alpaca, herded by the Q'eros, stand on a steep slope high in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050915_8929.JPG
  • High peaks and ridges of the Peruvian Andes in mist, as viewed from an airplane on September 25, 2005.
    050925_0025.JPG
  • A small wooden door is the entrance to a thatch roof stone hut in the alpaca herding village of the Q'eros people, under snow, in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of their ancient traditions.
    050914_8888.JPG
  • Wooden houses with a satellite dish at a coca farm in the upper valley of the Madre de Dios River in the Peruvian Amazon.
    050903_7544.JPG
  • Alpaca and sheep herds graze on a bare hillside in the Q'eros region of the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 16, 2005. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050916_9087.JPG
  • Clouds roll over the historical  town of the Q'eros people, high in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 15, 2005. Most Q'eros live at higher elevations during the dry season to herd alpaca, but potatoes and other staples are grown in this village, at a lower altitude of 11,000 feet. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050915_8976.JPG
  • Alpaca, herded by the Q'eros, search for food below melting snow high in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 15, 2005. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050915_8933.JPG
  • Alpaca meat hangs to dry inside a thatch hut in the herding village of Q'eros, Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 14, 2005. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050914_8880.JPG
  • The snow capped mountains of the Peruvian Andes as viewed from an airplane on September 25, 2005.
    050925_0024.JPG
  • The alpaca herding village of the Q'eros people lies under freshly fallen snow high in the Cordillera de Paucartambo, Andes Mountains, Peru on September 14, 2005. The Q'eros, a Quecha people living in the Peruvian Andes, are considered the last direct descendants of the Incas and proudly maintain many of the ancient traditions.
    050914_8865.JPG
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