Discovery, Aug 15, 2014, Rossella Lorenzi
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| The monster mouth doorway at Lagunita. Note the stylized eye of the earth monster and fangs along the doorway jamb. (Ivan Sprajc) |
A monster
mouth doorway, ruined pyramid temples and palace remains emerged from the
Mexican jungle as archaeologists unearthed two ancient Mayan cities.
Found in
the southeastern part of the Mexican state of Campeche, in the heart of the
Yucatan peninsula, the cities were hidden in thick vegetation and hardly
accessible.
"Aerial
photographs helped us in locating the sites," expedition leader Ivan
Sprajc, of the Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
(ZRC SAZU), said.
Sprajc and
his team found the massive remains as they further explored the area around
Chactun, a large Maya city discovered by the Slovenian archaeologist in 2013.
No other
site has so far been located in this area, which extends over some 1800 square
miles, between the so-called Rio Bec and Chenes regions, both known for their
characteristic architectural styles fashioned during the Late and Terminal
Classic periods, around 600 - 1000 A.D.
One of the
cities featured an extraordinary facade with an entrance representing the open
jaws of an earth monster.
The site
was actually visited in the 1970s by the American archaeologist Eric Von Euw,
who documented the facade and other stone monuments with yet unpublished
drawings.
However,
the exact location of the city, referred to as Lagunita by Von Euw, remained
lost. All the attempts at relocating it failed.
"The
information about Lagunita were vague and totally useless," Sprajc told
Discovery News.
"In
the jungle you can be as little as 600 feet from a large site and do not even
suspect it might be there; small mounds are all over the place, but they give
you no idea about where an urban center might be," he added.
Laguinita
was identified only after the archaeologists compared the newly found facade
and monuments with Von Euw's drawings.
The
monster-mouth facade turned to be one of the best preserved examples of this
type of doorways, which are common in the Late-Terminal Classic Rio Bec
architectural style, in the nearby region to the south.
"It
represents a Maya earth deity related with fertility. These doorways symbolize
the entrance to a cave and, in general, to the watery underworld, place of
mythological origin of maize and abode of ancestors," Sprajc said.
He also
found remains of a number of massive palace-like buildings arranged around four
major plazas. A ball court and a temple pyramid almost 65 ft high also stood in
the city, while 10 stelae (tall sculpted stone shafts) and three altars (low
circular stones) featured well-preserved reliefs and hieroglyphic inscriptions.
According
to preliminary reading by epigrapher Octavio Esparza Olguin from the National
Autonomous University of Mexico, one of the stelae was engraved on November 29,
A.D. 711 by a "lord of 4 k'atuns (20-year periods)."
Unfortunately,
the remaining text, which included the name of the ruler and possibly of his
wife, is heavily eroded.
"To
judge by both architectural volumes and monuments with inscriptions, Lagunita
must have been the seat of a relatively powerful polity, though the nature of
its relationship with the larger Chactun, lying some 10 km to the north,
remains unclear," Esparza Olguin said.
Similar
imposing was the other city unearthed by Sprajc. Previously unknown, the city
was named Tamchen, which means "deep well" in Yucatec Maya.
Indeed,
more than 30 chultuns were found at the site. These are bottle-shaped
underground chambers, largely intended for collecting rainwater.
"Several
chultuns were unusually deep, going down as far as 13 meters," Sprajc
said.
Like in
Laguinita, plazas were surrounded by large buildings. These include the remains
of an acropolis supporting a courtyard with three temples on its sides. A
pyramid temple with a rather well preserved sanctuary on top and a stela and an
altar at its base was also unearthed.
Tamchen
appears to have been contemporaneous with Lagunita, although there is evidence
for its settlement history going back to the Late Preclassic, between300 B.C.
and 250 A.D.
"Both
cities open new questions about the diversity of Maya culture, the role of that
largely unexplored area in the lowland Maya history, and its relations with
other polities," Sprajc said.

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