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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AhualulcoAhualulco - Wikipedia

    Ahualulco is a town and municipality in the Mexican state of San Luis Potosí in central Mexico. As of 2010, the municipality had a total population of 4,492. It was the birthplace of composer Julián Carrillo .

  2. Ahualulco de Mercado is a city and municipality, in Jalisco in central-western Mexico. The municipality covers an area of 274 km 2. As of 2005, the municipality had a total population of 21,465.

  3. Ahualulco de Mercado Tourism: Tripadvisor has 28 reviews of Ahualulco de Mercado Hotels, Attractions, and Restaurants making it your best Ahualulco de Mercado resource.

    • John Pint
    • Discovery of The Piedras Bola
    • Origin of The Megaspherulites
    • Hiking to The Great Stone Balls
    • Zip-Lines and A Wobbly Bridge
    • A Catalog of Giant Balls
    • How to Get There

    Approximately twenty-five years ago I heard rumors of some curious geological formations hidden high in the hills above the town of Ahualulco de Mercado, which is located about 58 kilometers west of Guadalajara, Mexico’s second-largest city. “There are giant stone balls up there,” I was told, “perfectly round and lying in a great bed of volcanic as...

    It seems this area first came to the public’s attention thanks to Robert Gordon, director of the Piedra Bola silver mine. The mine was named after a large round stone ball that stood near the entrance. In 1967, after his retirement, Gordon began a search to see if there might be other such balls in the area and soon found six more giant spheres app...

    The National Geographictheory is summarized by Tony Burton and visualizes the balls forming by crystallization of hot ash around nuclei of lava fragments, producing boulders of rhyolite. Smith’s hypothesis seems to have been rejected by the University of Guadalajara (UDG)’s Arturo Curiel Ballesteros in 1998. Instead, he proposes that the megaspheru...

    I was not really sure I wanted to see the new Piedras Bola park, as I had been quite satisfied with the site as it stood years ago, but one Saturday in May, 2009, I set out for Ahualulco with my wife Susy and our friend Mitch Ventura who had recently returned from fighting fires in Iraq. “This won’t be as exciting as strolling around Baghdad,” I to...

    Speaking of dangers on this trail, you’ll find two brand-new zip-lines along the way. These Tyrolean crossings are unmanned and just begging some daredevil to try traversing them sliding along on a belt or handkerchief, as demonstrated by the stars of countless adventure movies. One of these steel cables measures 330 meters in length and I can imag...

    Burton mentions more than 150 Piedras Bola but the UDG has catalogued only 72 of them, listing each ball’s coordinates, size and condition. Surely there are many others that escaped the researchers’ notice, not to mention all those that are just below the surface, about to be uncovered. As a matter of fact, I long ago ran into two stray balls 4.7 k...

    From the Guadalajara periférico or ring road, take highway 15 (Nogales and Tepic) 25 kilometers to highway 70, which heads southwest towards Ameca. This is only accessible from the libre, so don’t get on the cuota(toll road). Go about 17 kilometers until you come to the big sugar refinery on the road at the Tala turnoff. Continuing towards Ameca ab...

  4. Jul 10, 2018 · Ahualulco de Mercado is found in the state of Jalisco, cradle of mariachi and tequila, ambassadors of Mexico in the world. To visit it is to be in an endless party, dance a tapatío syrup in the Square of the Mariachis or arrive by Train to the land of Tequila, admire the agave fields and why not?

  5. Things to Do in Ahualulco de Mercado, Mexico: See Tripadvisor's 28 traveler reviews and photos of Ahualulco de Mercado tourist attractions. Find what to do today, this weekend, or in July. We have reviews of the best places to see in Ahualulco de Mercado. Visit top-rated & must-see attractions.

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  7. (28 de enero de 1875 - 9 de septiembre de 1965, Ahualulco, San Luis Potosí ), fue un compositor, director de orquesta, violinista y científico mexicano dentro de la corriente modernista internacional, considerado por varios especialistas como un genio de la Música en México y padre de la revolución musical más grande que jamás haya existido.