- Title: GUATAMALA: Archaeologists find rare Maya panels in Guatemala.
- Date: 14th March 2009
- Summary: GUATEMALA CITY, GUATEMALA (RECENT MARCH 10, 2009) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) EL MIRADOR SITE'S HEAD RESEARCHER, RICHARD HANSEN, SAYING: "Indicating that the stele the Popol Vuh has is of tremendous antiquity, extended well back into the pre-Classic (period) and it help us to make that link, that bridge, that gap, between the pre-Classic Mayan (period) and the early colonial documents when they first found the Popol Vuh, to the modern society of today and the future, therefore we can bring, we can link the past and the future and help us understand Mayan society and Mayan vision."
- Embargoed: 29th March 2009 13:00
- Keywords:
- Topics: History
- Reuters ID: LVA65MB9F6047LHXG7S07OU80CQN
- Story Text: Rare Mayan panels are discovered in El Mirador, the biggest ancient Mayan city in the world, giving reserachers an insight into the Mayan mythology of the Popol Vuh.
Archaeologists have uncovered carved stucco panels depicting cosmic monsters, gods and serpents in Guatemala's northern jungle that are the oldest known depictions of a famous Mayan creation myth.
The newly discovered panels, both 26 feet (8 metres) long and stacked on top of each other, were created around 300 BC and show scenes from the core Mayan mythology, the Popol Vuh.
It took investigators three months to uncover the carvings while excavating El Mirador, the biggest ancient Mayan city in the world, the site's head researcher, Richard Hansen, said on Monday (March 10).
The Maya built soaring temples and elaborate palaces in Central America and southern Mexico, dominating the region for some 2,000 years, before mysteriously abandoning their cities around 900 AD.
The El Mirador basin was deserted much earlier with the large urban population leaving a complex network of roads and waterways and a massive pyramid now covered under thick vegetation.
The earliest written version of the Popol Vuh was discovered in the early 1700s by a Spanish colonial priest and the panels are the first known sculptural depictions of the main characters in the myth -- two hero twins, Hansen said.
"We discovered a water collection, a water system, a water collection system that was decorated with friezes portraying the hero princes of Popol Vuh. We have Ixbalanque (one of the princes') and we have Hunahpu (twin brother of Ixbalanque) with the decapitated head of their father Hun Hunahpu, in swimming figures inside a frame of cosmic monsters and a frame of celestial figures," Hansen, an Idaho State University archeologist who has worked at El Mirador for over a decade, said.
On one panel, the twins are depicted surrounded by cosmic monsters and above them is a bird deity with outstretched wings. On the other, there is a Mayan corn god framed by an undulating serpent, said Hansen who worked as a consultant for Mel Gibson's 2006 movie about the Maya, "Apocalypto."
"Indicating that the stele the Popol Vuh has is of tremendous antiquity, extended well back into the pre-Classic (period) and it help us to make that link, that bridge, that gap, between the pre-Classic Mayan (period) and the early colonial documents when they first found the Popol Vuh, to the modern society of today and the future, therefore we can bring, we can link the past and the future and help us understand Mayan society and Mayan vision," Hansen added.
Spread over more than 500,000 acres (2,000 square km), El Mirador is three times the size of Guatemala's famous Tikal ruins, a popular tourist destination.
But El Mirador's conservation is threatened by drug traffickers who use the area to ship cocaine and heroin across the porous border with Mexico, deforestation by locals, looters who steal ancient artifacts to sell on the black market and wild animal poachers.
Last year, President Alvaro Colom announced the creation of a massive park in the dense jungle of northern Guatemala's Peten region, which would encompass both El Mirador and the already excavated Tikal.
The plan includes the construction by 2020 of a silent, propane powered train to carry thousands of tourists to the ruins, currently only accessible by helicopter or a two-day hike through the jungle. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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