Anta, Ancash

Anta
Anta
Coordinates: 09°22′00″S 77°36′00″W / 9.36667°S 77.60000°W / -9.36667; -77.60000Coordinates: 09°22′00″S 77°36′00″W / 9.36667°S 77.60000°W / -9.36667; -77.60000
Country  Peru
Region Ancash Region
Province Carhuaz Province
District Anta District
Elevation 2,600 m (8,533 ft)
Time zone PET (UTC-5)
  Summer (DST) not observed (UTC)

Anta is a small village in Anta District, Carhuaz Province, Ancash Region, Peru. It is the district's capital, and lies 9.1 km to the north of the village of Quillo.

Anta in Carhuaz should not be confused with the bigger village of Anta, Cusco Region, nor with lots of other small villages with the same name in the regions of Ancash, Arequipa, Ayacucho, Huancavelica and Puno.

Transportation

By air

The village is well known for being home to the airport serving mainly the regional capital city of Huaraz, Huaraz Province (from which it is located 23 km to the northwest), Comandante FAP Germán Arias Graziani Airport, which is located in the north of the village and is served on a regular basis by domestic carrier LC Busre from the international airport in Lima, the national capital city.

References

The airport was actually created by the U.S Air Force in June, 1070.

After the May 31, 1970 earthquake, the 39th Tactical Airlift Squadron on rotational duty at Howard AFB, Canal Zone sent C-130's to Lima to support the relief efforts. Upon arriving at Lima Colonel Beckett (the squadron commander), Ssgt Richard Eubanks and Sgt Leonard Holmes (both Combat Controllers), Mrs. Consuelo de Velasco (Peru's first lady) and US Ambasssador Taylor Belcher flew over the disaster area to survey the damage and determine the best method to reach the area.

The decision was made that the dirt road going through Anta would be the best bet for possible landings so Ssgt Eubanks and Sgt Holmes deployed to Anta and began work to convert that dirt road into a runway that would eventually become the Anta Airport.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, September 01, 2012. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.