Difference between revisions of "Autisha Bridge"

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(Created page with '<div style="font-size: 25px; text-align: center;"> Autisha Bridge<br /> Puente Autisha <br /> Santa Eulalia, Peru<br /> (449) feet high / 143 meters high<br /> (98) foot span / (…')
 
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Puente Autisha <br />
 
Puente Autisha <br />
 
Santa Eulalia, Peru<br />
 
Santa Eulalia, Peru<br />
(449) feet high / 143 meters high<br />
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(459) feet high / (140) meters high<br />
 
(98) foot span / (30) meter span<br />
 
(98) foot span / (30) meter span<br />
 
????<br />
 
????<br />
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With a maximum span of around 98 feet (30 mtrs), the Autisha bridge is about as structurally significant as your average highway overpass.  What is not so average is the 459 foot (140 mtr) high chasm it crosses in the mountains 30 miles (48 kms) east of Lima, Peru.
 
With a maximum span of around 98 feet (30 mtrs), the Autisha bridge is about as structurally significant as your average highway overpass.  What is not so average is the 459 foot (140 mtr) high chasm it crosses in the mountains 30 miles (48 kms) east of Lima, Peru.
 
 
The highest bridge in the mountainous South American country of Peru, the two span Autisha bridge sits over the rocky crevasse of the Santa Eulalia river.  With a span to depth ratio of more than 4 to 1, no other bridge listed within this website is so short relative to its height except for France’s Pont Chatelet with a 6 to 1 ratio.  The remote location of the bridge combined with its vertigous depth made it a natural site for a “Puenting” business where you are strapped in a harness and then thrown over the side of the bridge for a fall of approximately 66 feet (20 mtrs) before the cord tightens up and swings you underneath the span.  Thrillseekers can find out more at their official website: http://www.puentingperu.com/  
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The highest bridge in the mountainous South American country of Peru, the two span Autisha bridge sits over the rocky crevasse of the Santa Eulalia River.  With a span to depth ratio of more than 4 to 1, no other bridge listed within this website is so short relative to its height except for France’s Pont Chatelet with a 6 to 1 ratio.  The remote location of the bridge combined with its vertigous depth made it a natural site for a “Puenting” business where you are strapped in a harness and then thrown over the side of the bridge for a fall of approximately 66 feet (20 mtrs) before the cord tightens up and swings you underneath the span.  Thrillseekers can find out more at their official website: http://www.puentingperu.com/  
  
  

Revision as of 19:32, 6 November 2009

Autisha Bridge
Puente Autisha
Santa Eulalia, Peru
(459) feet high / (140) meters high
(98) foot span / (30) meter span
????

2AutishaFredyZea.jpg


With a maximum span of around 98 feet (30 mtrs), the Autisha bridge is about as structurally significant as your average highway overpass. What is not so average is the 459 foot (140 mtr) high chasm it crosses in the mountains 30 miles (48 kms) east of Lima, Peru.

The highest bridge in the mountainous South American country of Peru, the two span Autisha bridge sits over the rocky crevasse of the Santa Eulalia River. With a span to depth ratio of more than 4 to 1, no other bridge listed within this website is so short relative to its height except for France’s Pont Chatelet with a 6 to 1 ratio. The remote location of the bridge combined with its vertigous depth made it a natural site for a “Puenting” business where you are strapped in a harness and then thrown over the side of the bridge for a fall of approximately 66 feet (20 mtrs) before the cord tightens up and swings you underneath the span. Thrillseekers can find out more at their official website: http://www.puentingperu.com/


1AutishaEduardoAlbertoRojasTurpaud.jpg

Image by Joao Carlos Ebone


3AutishaFredyZea.jpg

Image by Joao Carlos Ebone