Answer:
1. an adopted little girl
2. rock paintings
Explanation:
1. <em>La historia oficial</em>, or The Official Story, is an acclaimed drama-historical argentinian film, premiered in 1985. The film is set during the last year of the latest military dictatorship in Argentina called the National Reorganization Process, which ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983, and it follows a high class family, composed by Alicia, a history teacher, Roberto, a businessman who became wealthy by dealing with the dictatorship, and Gaby, their adoptive daughter. We follow Alicia, the main character, who is somewhat oblivious to the state terrorism and disappearances happening during the regime, and who believes that only criminals and guilty people are put under arrest. But everything changes for her once she mets with a lifelong friend, Ana, who recently returned to Argentina after fleeing the country during the first years of the dictatorship. Ana tells her she had been kept captive, tortured and raped for being with a man labeled as "subversive". While in captivity she tells Alicia she was witness to how pregnant women were taken to delivery but returned with no children, and whose babies were thought to be sold to wealthy couples. After this last revelation, Alicia starts having doubts about the origin of their adoptive daughter Gaby, starting an relentless investigation about her origins. So Gaby, the adopted girl, is the focal point of the whole movie, and is the trigger for the main character's (Alicia) motivations.
2. Lihué Calel National Park is located in the Lihue Calel Department, in the La Pampa Province, in Argentina. The name Lihué Calel means <em>Mountains of Life, </em>in the Mapuche language, natives of south-central Chile and west-central Argentina. The area is characterized by mountain plains and plateaus. There are preserved archeological sites where prehistoric indigenous people inhabited the land and related with the environment. One distinctive site is the <em>Valle de las Pinturas, </em>or the Valley of Paintings (given the name due to the presence of different resinous plants and <em>molles</em> that were anciently used to prepare paintings) where <em>late rock art</em> can be found, with geometric forms in red and black colors, dating back to 2000 B.C. There are several locations within the park where native populations made art and burial sites.