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Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

09.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

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Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

09.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

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Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

09.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

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Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

09.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

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Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

09.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

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Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

08.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

  •  
Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

08.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

  •  
Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

08.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

  •  
Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

08.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

  •  
Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

08.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

  •  
Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

08.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

  •  
Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled

08.02.2024. Viljandi. Visual arts festival Viljandi Tuled (the Lights of Viljandi) brings giant Ouroboros to Viljandi. The wooden Ouroboros, an ancient symbol depicting a snake eating its own tail. It symbolizes the continuity, renewal and cyclicity of the environment. Ouroboros is six meters high and twelve meters wide, mainly made from recycled and sustainably sourced wood. Photo: Elmo Riig/SAKALA

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CHINA-SICHUAN-ZIYANG-MENGXIHE SITE-ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERY (CN)

CHINA-SICHUAN-ZIYANG-MENGXIHE SITE-ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERY (CN)

(240130) -- ZIYANG, Jan. 30, 2024 (Xinhua) -- This photo taken on Dec. 5, 2023 shows pieces of snake bones unearthed at the Mengxihe Site in Lezhi County of Ziyang, southwest China's Sichuan Province. The Mengxihe Site was announced as one of the six most important archaeological findings of 2023 in China on Tuesday, according to the Sichuan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology. The Mengxihe Site, dating back 50,000 to 70,000 years, has preserved a number of organic matter remains including animal fossils, ebony and plant seeds. A flood in the summer of 2019 unearthed ebony and animal fossils that had been buried underground for tens of thousands of years, as well as some stone tools used by ancient humans, said Zheng Zhexuan, an archaeologist at the institute. In 2023, more than 105,000 stone tools, wood tools, bone tools and animal fossils, as well as more than 60,000 relics such as plant seeds, fruits and spores were unearthed. Traces of fire, cutting, carving and polishing left by

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CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

(230518) -- YAOUNDE, May 18, 2023 (Xinhua) -- This photo taken on April 12, 2023 shows a statue of a cavalry in front of the royal palace of Bamoun in Foumban, West region, Cameroon. The royal palace of Bamoun displays about 4,000 exhibits including thrones, weapons, wood carvings, paintings and manuscripts, showing the history and culture of the kingdom for more than 600 years. With a unique design inspired by the Bamoun symbol of "two-headed snake, spider and double gong," the museum built a new exhibition hall next to the royal palace in 2013. (Xinhua/Kepseu)

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CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

(230518) -- YAOUNDE, May 18, 2023 (Xinhua) -- This photo taken on April 12, 2023 shows the new exhibition hall of the royal palace of Bamoun in Foumban, West region, Cameroon. The royal palace of Bamoun displays about 4,000 exhibits including thrones, weapons, wood carvings, paintings and manuscripts, showing the history and culture of the kingdom for more than 600 years. With a unique design inspired by the Bamoun symbol of "two-headed snake, spider and double gong," the museum built a new exhibition hall next to the royal palace in 2013. (Xinhua/Kepseu)

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CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

(230518) -- YAOUNDE, May 18, 2023 (Xinhua) -- A man walks past the royal palace of Bamoun in Foumban, West region, Cameroon, April 12, 2023. The royal palace of Bamoun displays about 4,000 exhibits including thrones, weapons, wood carvings, paintings and manuscripts, showing the history and culture of the kingdom for more than 600 years. With a unique design inspired by the Bamoun symbol of "two-headed snake, spider and double gong," the museum built a new exhibition hall next to the royal palace in 2013. (Xinhua/Kepseu)

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CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

(230518) -- YAOUNDE, May 18, 2023 (Xinhua) -- This photo taken on April 12, 2023 shows the new exhibition hall of the royal palace of Bamoun in Foumban, West region, Cameroon. The royal palace of Bamoun displays about 4,000 exhibits including thrones, weapons, wood carvings, paintings and manuscripts, showing the history and culture of the kingdom for more than 600 years. With a unique design inspired by the Bamoun symbol of "two-headed snake, spider and double gong," the museum built a new exhibition hall next to the royal palace in 2013. (Xinhua/Kepseu)

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CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

(230518) -- YAOUNDE, May 18, 2023 (Xinhua) -- This photo taken on April 12, 2023 shows outfits and masks in the royal palace of Bamoun, Foumban, West region, Cameroon. The royal palace of Bamoun displays about 4,000 exhibits including thrones, weapons, wood carvings, paintings and manuscripts, showing the history and culture of the kingdom for more than 600 years. With a unique design inspired by the Bamoun symbol of "two-headed snake, spider and double gong," the museum built a new exhibition hall next to the royal palace in 2013. (Xinhua/Kepseu)

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CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

CAMEROON-FOUMBAN-ROYAL PALACE OF BAMOUN-MUSEUM

(230518) -- YAOUNDE, May 18, 2023 (Xinhua) -- A guide introduces Bamoun kings in the royal palace of Bamoun, Foumban, West region, Cameroon, April 12, 2023. The royal palace of Bamoun displays about 4,000 exhibits including thrones, weapons, wood carvings, paintings and manuscripts, showing the history and culture of the kingdom for more than 600 years. With a unique design inspired by the Bamoun symbol of "two-headed snake, spider and double gong," the museum built a new exhibition hall next to the royal palace in 2013. (Xinhua/Kepseu)

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