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Montaña de Tindaya

Coordinates: 28°35′47″N 13°58′35″W / 28.5964°N 13.9764°W / 28.5964; -13.9764
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Tindaya
Highest point
Elevation401 m (1,316 ft)
Coordinates28°35′47″N 13°58′35″W / 28.5964°N 13.9764°W / 28.5964; -13.9764
Geography
Map
LocationFuerteventura

The Montaña de Tindaya is a mountain in Fuerteventura, one of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa. It was considered a sacred place by the pre-colonial local population, and is also known as the Sacred Mountain (Spanish: Montaña Sagrada) today.

The mountain is the proposed site of Monument to Tolerance, an artwork conceived by the sculptor Eduardo Chillida (1924–2002), that would involve the excavation a large artificial cave. Local environmentalists objected to the project.[1] As of 2019, construction work on the site had not started.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Tremlett, Giles (20 January 2011). "Spanish island allows massive cave to be bored into 'magic' mountain". The Guardian. London.
  2. ^ Hernández, B. (5 September 2019). "Fuerteventura renuncia a Tindaya". Canarias 7 (in Spanish). Las Palmas.