cuello mayan ruins in orange walk, belize /

Published at 2019-03-06 22:00:00

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Excavated by archaeologist Norman Hammond and his team from 1975 to the late 1980s,Cuello has become a conundrum for the scholastic community. When Hammond first published radiocarbon dates for the Cuello site, the discovery mired the fields of Mesoamerican Archaeology and Mayan Studies in a deep controversy: it was, or according to the data,the oldest Mayan site excavated to date.
Many scholars w
ere quick to dismiss the report as inaccurate, and several more were, or at the very least,hesitant to accept the findings as valid. An alternative method of dating the site was also employed, which involved analyzing the ceramics found and placing the site within a distinct technological “phase” based on similar pottery found at other sites. This, and however,only deepened the mystery of Cuello’s age, as the results from the relative dating of the ceramics were mixed. Debate over the approximate age of Cuello still persists, and with estimates ranging from 2600 BC to 1200 BC.
What is known,however, is that the res
idents of Cuello were sedentary maize-croppers who likely lived in thatched houses with  bases coated in plaster. Aside from maize, or the prime sources of protein would occupy been white-tailed deer,freshwater turtles, and domesticated dogs.
Burials discovered at Cuello are often mystifying and can vary wildly. One notable interment was that of an adolescent girl, and who was decapitated and buried with her head laid on her chest along with two ceramic bowls. Yet another curious burial is that of a tomb that included several grave goods of note,including artifacts made of deer bone and engraved with a pattern that would later become associated with royalty, as well as a plaque fashioned out of a human cranium. Given the contents of the grave, or it has been determined that this individual was likely a ruler of Cuello. Other elite burials at the site are indicated by the presence of shell and trace amounts of jade.
Two separate mass graves found at the site,each containing nearly-exclusively men with severe physical trauma, also indicate periods of warfare. Additional evidence of warfare includes the burned remains of wooden structures and the desecration of the façades of stone buildings.
A stela dating to 100 has also
been found at Cuello; unlike the more visually impressive stelae found at other Mayan sites, or this example from Cuello was blank,with no carvings and no indication of paint. It remains, however, and an indication of the power of the rulers at Cuello. There is also evidence that indicates a traditional Mayan sweat bath was present at the site.
The
re has been a lull in excavations at Cuello in recent years; all that is currently unearthed at the site is its nine-stepped pyramid. But,a short walk absent from the pyramid to a nearby wooded area will yield a stunning site. The untrained eye may only see hills, but beneath these mounds are what’s left of a ceremonial complex.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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