Mexican archaeologists find submerged Mayan cultural heritage
Submerged archaeologists have found 12 Mayan pre-Hispanic skulls, two
rifles from the Colony time and about 50 vessels in the sinkholes in
southwestern Mexico, Mexican culture officials said on Tuesday.
The
Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) announced
that those relics were found in Mexico’s Yucatan state during researches
aimed at completing the Underwater Archeological Atlas of Yucatan
Peninsula.
According to INAH archaeologist, Lisseth Pedroza, some 50 domestic
and ritual vessels from the Late Pre-classic period (400-250 A.C.) were
found in Kan Kab Che’en sinkholes. Some of the vessels “are red,
egg-shaped, and had funerary use, as intentional perforation reveals;
their shape is similar to Roman amphorae, until now, only found in
Cuello, Belize,” she said.
Meanwhile, in Balmi, Canun Che’en and La Guadalupana sinkholes, human
remains from the pre-Hispanic time were found, including 12 skulls,
which present cranial and teeth deformations. The two rifles found in
these sinkholes “still are being studied to determine their origin
(Spanish, French or British) and date, because they might be from 18th
century or early 19th,” Pedroza added.
“For the Mayan ancient civilization, the sinkholes there were sacred
places and were considered the access to the underworld. They were
places to practice rituals related to birth and death,” Pedroza said.
MEXICO CITY, Xinhua |