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Idaho
State researchers help make major Mayan archaeological discoveries
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the Original Article Click Here……
The government of Guatemala has announced the recent discovery of a series
of major archaeological discoveries – including ancient detailed panels – in
an area known as the Mirador Basin of northern Guatemala and part of
southern Campeche, Mexico.
The area has been under extensive exploration and investigation for more
than two decades by the Mirador Basin Project, directed by Richard Hansen,
senior scientist in the Institute for Mesoamerican Research at Idaho State
University and president of the FARES Foundation based in Idaho.
The discoveries, announced March 7, include major finds in the ancient city
of El Mirador and the newly discovered ancient city in the southern part of
the Basin known as El Pesquero, Spanish for “The Fishermen.” The area, which
was known anciently as the “Kan” (serpent) Kingdom, consists of about
810,000 acres of pristine tropical forest in northern Guatemala and contains
a concentration of very large and early ancient Maya cities, dating to the
Middle and Late Preclassic periods of Maya civilization, between about 1000
B.C. and A.D. 150.
Scholars have labeled the area as the “Cradle of Maya Civilization” because
of the size, scale and antiquity of ancient Maya cities contained in the
area. The Mirador Basin also is the heart of a major new conservation
program called “Cuatro Balam” designed by Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom
Caballeros to protect a substantial forested area of northern Guatemala’s
Peten region.
The research and conservation program being conducted in the Mirador area is
supported by the Global Heritage Fund of Palo Alto, Calif., a coalition of
Guatemalan citizens known as APANAC, in Guatemala City, and perhaps most
significantly, the formation of group of the most prominent Guatemalan
companies and industries into a foundation known as PACUNAM to support the
investigation and conservation of the Mirador area.
The discovery at the site of El Mirador, which is considered the largest of
all ancient Maya cities in Mesoamerica, consists of a detailed series of
panels made of carved and modeled lime plaster that lined a water collection
system in an area of the city known as the Central Acropolis. The panels and
water collection tanks date to the Late Preclassic period, from 300 B.C. to
about the time of Christ. Idaho State University student Joseph Craig
Argyle, who has been investigating the water collection systems at El
Mirador under the direction of Hansen, excavated the panels.
The panels, which flank the series of pools of a unique water control system
that included the capture of rainwater from surrounding massive
architecture, depict two “swimming” individuals that are framed by cosmic
monsters of importance in ancient Maya art. “We tentatively believe that the
‘swimmers’ represent the Hero Twins of the Popol Vuh,” said Hansen,
referring to the Quiche Maya text of the Maya creation story, which was
found in the highland town of Chichicastenango in A.D. 1700 and transcribed
by a Dominican monk named Francisco Ximenez by about 1704.
“One of the swimmers has a decapitated head on his flanks, which is likely
the decapitated head of his father, who was known in Maya mythology as Hun
Hunahpu.” The other swimmer has a headdress with jaguar features, which
would possibly associate him with his twin brother, known as ‘Xbalanque’
(Young Jaguar Sun), according to Hansen.“This suggests that the antiquity of
the Popol Vuh as an authentic creation story extends far into the Preclassic
eras,” said Hector Escobedo, vice minister of Culture in the Guatemalan
Ministry of Culture. Additional upper panels of the water frieze show what
appears to be an undulating serpent, which frames Deity images of an old man
with wings.
Argyle with ceramics from the Mayan water storage system.
“All in all, the scene is a complex blend of early Maya mythology and
cosmology,” said Hansen.
Another important discovery was made in the southern part of the Mirador
Basin by a team from the Guatemalan Institute of Anthropology and History
and the Mirador Basin Project, supervised by project co-director Hector
Mejia. Looters had penetrated the upper portion of a large mound and
had revealed the remains of an ancient roof comb, which is a decorative
panel on the summit of a pyramid structure. Excavations,
stabilization, and consolidation of the art and architecture by the Mirador
Basin project indicated that the roof comb was also unusually early,
consistent with other sites in the area.
“The Pesquero structure is of extraordinary importance,” Hansen said,
“because it indicates that many of the features commonly thought to be
unique to the great Classic periods of Maya history (A.D. 300-A.D. 900)
extend well into the Middle and Late Preclassic periods of Maya history,
from by about 800 B.C. to the time of Christ.”
For more information on Mirador Basin scientific discoveries and the efforts
to conserve this extraordinary area, please see the accompanying side bar,
or visit www.miradorbasin.com.
Guatemalan Government Cuatro Balam Conservation Plan
Is New Effort to Protect Mirador Basin
Guatemala City, Guatemala – The area of the proposed new conservation plan
of Cuatro Balam is a major new effort by the Guatemalan government to curb
the rampant deforestation, logging, narcotics trafficking, poaching, looting
and seemingly endless poverty by including the communities in a truly
sustainable model based on conservation and tourism.
The Kan Kingdom/Mirador Basin forms the heart of the Cuatro Balam
conservation program, as announced by Guatemalan President Álvaro Colom
Caballeros, in his inaugural address last year.
“The Kan Kingdom was unique in world history,” says Richard Hansen, senior
scientist in the Institute for Mesoamerican Research at Idaho State
University and president of the FARES Foundation based in Idaho, “because of
the concentration of such large and early centers that were connected by a
latticework of ancient causeways, forming what we believe to be the first
economic and political state level society in the Western Hemisphere.”
While some sites in North America, such as Poverty Point and Watson Break in
Louisiana, and the Caral site in Peru have sites with important monumental
architecture that date to an earlier period, they do not exceed the size,
scale and sophistication of the early sites in the Mirador Basin, according
to Hansen.
The Mirador Basin sites are among the largest in the Western Hemisphere,
with art and architecture dating to at least 1000 years earlier than the
better-known Classic sites such as Tikal, Palenque and Copan.In addition,
the sites contain structures that rank among the largest ancient pyramids in
the world. The area also contains an extensive network of ancient causeways
or highways, representing what Hansen terms is the “first freeway system” in
the world.
Furthermore, the area is the last intact area of tropical rainforest left in
Central America and efforts to protect it have allowed Hansen to be
recognized as the “Environmentalist of the Year for Latin America, 2008” by
the Latin Trade Bravo Business association, based in Miami.
Movie star Mel Gibson has been an active proponent for its conservation as
the Chairman of the Board for the FARES Foundation. “It (the Mirador area)
is arguably the greatest archaeological find in the Western Hemisphere. For
30 years, Dr. Richard Hansen has worked with unparalleled commitment and
passion to bring to light these awe-inspiring discoveries,” said Gibson
recently at the Latin Trade Awards for Excellence in Miami. “Richard has
created a new model for rainforest and archaeological site conservation
through sustainable programs using the ancient jungle shrouded cities as the
economic catalysts for their own preservation.”
What makes the project unusual is the blend of the private and public
sectors that are mounting a major effort to investigate and conserve the
area. The vision that President Colom and other government authorities are
providing, together with the private sector, is to provide a more viable and
sustainable program through active conservation, responsible development, a
strengthened security system and economic opportunities through training and
involvement of communities in tourism programs.
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