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Are Mexican or Egyptian pyramids bigger?

While Egypt's Great Pyramid of Giza is by far the most talked-about pyramid in the world, it isn't the biggest by a long shot. That title goes to the Great Pyramid of Cholula - an ancient Aztec temple in Puebla, Mexico with a base four times larger than Giza's, and nearly twice the volume.



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Compared to the Egyptian pyramids at Giza, Mayan pyramids are mostly smaller, but steeper and more ornate. They were built of stone blocks held together with lime mortar. Some were covered with plaster and painted.

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Egypt's Great Pyramid of Giza, which stands 481 feet (147 meters) high, is the world's tallest pyramid. But the world's largest pyramid lies half a world away in Cholula, Mexico. Tlachihualtepetl, or the Great Pyramid of Cholula, is about 217 feet (66 meters) tall with a base of 1,476 by 1,476 feet (450 by 450 meters).

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For example, the 18th Dynasty of the Egyptians dates from the 14th Century BC, whilst the Aztecs didn't begin to flourish in the Valley of Mexico till the 14th Century AD, making any contact or communication between the two cultures impossible.

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They are not. To be more precise: the Aztec empire, which was established in the 1420s AD, had no relationship with the ancient Egyptians, who had pretty much given up on building pyramids in the middle of the second millennium BC and hadn't built a stepped pyramid for a thousand years before that.

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The Pyramids in Mexico Mexico is home to some of the most impressive pyramids in the world, built by ancient civilizations like the Aztecs and the Mayans. Though much about them is still shrouded in mystery, historians believe the Mexico pyramids were used for religious or ceremonial purposes.

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The Great Pyramid was destroyed along with the rest of the Aztec civilization by the Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes and his army in 1521. Underneath its ruins, the remains of six earlier pyramids were later found, evidence of the constant rebuilding process common to the Mesoamerican pyramids.

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Via its port at Isla Cerritos on the northern coast, Chichen Itza became an important commercial center, trading in goods—including gold and other treasures—with other cities throughout the Americas. At its height, it is believed that as many as 50,000 people lived in the city.

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China's pyramids are regarded by archeologists as. some of the most mysterious structures of the ancient. world.

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