I'm by no means a scholar on such topics, but I have always had an interested fascination to some of the ancient cultures. My interest started with Egypt and their mythology and expanded to Greece and Roman. Three of my four dogs in adulthood have been named after ancient goddesses. But my interest has never been relegated to the Mediterranean societies. I fell in love with learning about the Inca, Mayan and Aztec empires as a kid and then eventually that grew into others like the Celtic and Norse societies and eventually into some of the Asian cultures within Japan and China and such.
I was about to title this thread something along the lines of The Mayan Empire, because that's what this first post is about to be about, but I want to keep it open to others as well. Be it simple discussion or things we discover as we move forward or whatever it may be. I'm trying to learn to title some of these in a way where it's inclusive to similar areas so I'm not constantly creating new threads for every similar thing.
To get to the point, I came across the following and found it quite intriguing and something I'm hoping to look more into later. It seems that recent surveys and such have found that the Mayan society may have been larger and more developed than previously believed.
Hundreds of Mayan Cities and Towns with Ball Courts and Roads Discovered in LiDAR Survey in Guatemala
I have no idea if anyone else is interested in or enjoys any of the ancient histories. I know it's not a subject for everyone, but a few of us history nerd types exist.
This also reminds me that I need to look and see more about the discovery down around Ark City a few years back. I haven't heard anything from it in a while but I know there was a lot of excitement when they first discovered it and I believe some sort of museum was to be setup. The Entzanoa or something?
I also took a vacation a little over a year ago to the four corners region to spend some time learning and appreciating those old cultures. I'd always been fascinated with the cliff dwellings near Durango and finally got to see them in person. Also spent some time in New Mexico, Utah and Arizona visiting sites. I love those old cultures.
I was about to title this thread something along the lines of The Mayan Empire, because that's what this first post is about to be about, but I want to keep it open to others as well. Be it simple discussion or things we discover as we move forward or whatever it may be. I'm trying to learn to title some of these in a way where it's inclusive to similar areas so I'm not constantly creating new threads for every similar thing.
To get to the point, I came across the following and found it quite intriguing and something I'm hoping to look more into later. It seems that recent surveys and such have found that the Mayan society may have been larger and more developed than previously believed.
Hundreds of Mayan Cities and Towns with Ball Courts and Roads Discovered in LiDAR Survey in Guatemala
Researchers studying the Mayan Empire have discovered that hidden under the rainforests of Guatemala were more than 900 habitations including at least 4 large cities and thousands of yards of raised causeways connecting them.
Together the research reveals the true scope of territorial reach and technological sophistication of the Maya like never before.
The revolutionary method that led to this discovery was a light detection and ranging (LiDAR) survey, which uses lasers to give centimeter-accuracy of the terrain features below a forest canopy, effectively allowing archaeologists to do what used to take decades of expensive excavations with a few fly overs in a plane.
650 square miles across northern Guatemala’s Mirador-Calakmul Karst Basin (MCKB) revealed 30 of the famous ball courts of the Ancient Mesoamerican team sport, 195 cement reservoirs which literally drained nearby lakes dry, and 110 miles of elevated walkways connecting 417 villages.
All of this dates to the middle and late Preclassical period of Mayan History, contemporary with such famous events in the Near East as the sack of the ancient Elamite capital of Susa by Assyria, the destruction of the Temple of Solomon by the Babylonians, and the Greco-Persian Wars including the Battle of Thermopylae.
The past 40 years of traditional excavations in the MCKB revealed around 56 sites, including the city of El Mirador, which contains the largest stone pyramid in the history of the Mayan world, La Danta. 205,508 limestone blocks comprise La Danta, and since it’s even larger than the great pyramid of Giza, would likely have required 6 to 10 million days of labor to build.
Together the research reveals the true scope of territorial reach and technological sophistication of the Maya like never before.
The revolutionary method that led to this discovery was a light detection and ranging (LiDAR) survey, which uses lasers to give centimeter-accuracy of the terrain features below a forest canopy, effectively allowing archaeologists to do what used to take decades of expensive excavations with a few fly overs in a plane.
650 square miles across northern Guatemala’s Mirador-Calakmul Karst Basin (MCKB) revealed 30 of the famous ball courts of the Ancient Mesoamerican team sport, 195 cement reservoirs which literally drained nearby lakes dry, and 110 miles of elevated walkways connecting 417 villages.
All of this dates to the middle and late Preclassical period of Mayan History, contemporary with such famous events in the Near East as the sack of the ancient Elamite capital of Susa by Assyria, the destruction of the Temple of Solomon by the Babylonians, and the Greco-Persian Wars including the Battle of Thermopylae.
The past 40 years of traditional excavations in the MCKB revealed around 56 sites, including the city of El Mirador, which contains the largest stone pyramid in the history of the Mayan world, La Danta. 205,508 limestone blocks comprise La Danta, and since it’s even larger than the great pyramid of Giza, would likely have required 6 to 10 million days of labor to build.
I have no idea if anyone else is interested in or enjoys any of the ancient histories. I know it's not a subject for everyone, but a few of us history nerd types exist.
This also reminds me that I need to look and see more about the discovery down around Ark City a few years back. I haven't heard anything from it in a while but I know there was a lot of excitement when they first discovered it and I believe some sort of museum was to be setup. The Entzanoa or something?
I also took a vacation a little over a year ago to the four corners region to spend some time learning and appreciating those old cultures. I'd always been fascinated with the cliff dwellings near Durango and finally got to see them in person. Also spent some time in New Mexico, Utah and Arizona visiting sites. I love those old cultures.
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