1 dead in Mexico pyramid shooting
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The crazed Nazi-sympathizing gunman who killed a Canadian tourist and injured 13 others after opening fire from atop a pyramid at Mexico’s Teotihuacán ruins plotted the attack for two months – and studied an image of the tourist hotspot that was in his hotel room.
Mexican authorities identified Julio César Jasso Ramírez as the man who opened fire at the Teotihuacan pyramids, a 27-year-old Mexican national.
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Archaeologists have discovered what they think are ruins of an Aztec pyramid razed by vengeful Spanish conquerors in what is now one of Mexico City's most crime-ridden districts. Construction workers unearthed ancient walls in the ...
Archaeologists have unearthed skeletons with their hands apparently bound behind their backs, who were decapitated or had spear wounds.
Based on video where the shooter tells those from "goddamn Europe" they "are not going to return," the gunman may have chosen the Teotihuacán pyramids to target tourists.
A gunman who killed one person and injured 13 others at Mexico’s Teotihuacán pyramids ranted about how much he hated tourists from Europe before opening fire.
It was an archaeological adventure: a 12-day family trip to Mayan and Aztec pyramid cities, from Mexico City to the Yucatan jungle. Our timeline spanned from the ancient city of Teotihuacan, founded before the birth of Christ, to sites like Chichen Itza ...
Archeologists made a stunning discovery in Mexico on Wednesday when they uncovered an ancient temple nestled inside an Aztec-era pyramid that was damaged during last September's 7.1-magnitude earthquake. Scientists from Mexico’s National Institute of ...
A photograph of the ruins of Huēyi Teōcalli with the Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral in the background. (David Moran/Flickr) The replica stands in the city’s main square, just steps from the archaeological site where the remains of the actual Huēyi ...