Satellites Uncover Mayan
Secrets
Jorge Grochembake*
GUATEMALA CITY, Mar 3 (Tierramérica) - Mayan ruins, hidden beneath soil and
dense forest, have been located in Guatemala using satellite technology,
revealing more secrets of this ancient indigenous culture.
Guatemalan experts, alongside academics and scientists from the U.S. National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), have found ruins in the San Bartolo
region in the northern department of Petén, using images taken from outer space.
"Archaeological efforts are now being aided with satellite photography," Mónica
Urquizú, assistant director of the San Bartolo Regional Archaeological Project,
told Tierramérica. Of the 20 archaeologists involved in the programme led by
U.S. expert William Saturno, half are from Guatemala and half are from the
United States.
The team found that there is a relation between the colour and the reflection of
the vegetation as it is seen in the images -- through instruments that measure
light in general but also cover the infrared spectrum -- and the location of
known archaeological sites.
The images that show potential ruins are scrutinised, then a trip is made to the
site, where probes are dug to obtain the chronology of the ruins, Urquizú
explained.
The San Bartolo project involves the Guatemalan Department of Pre-Hispanic
Monument's institute of anthropology and history, NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Centre, and the U.S. universities of New Hampshire, Harvard and Yale.
The programme encompasses in-depth research of the area's ruins, including
architectural structures and murals, to better understand the Mayan culture,
which lasted some 3,400 years (until the 9th century), across the region that is
now southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and the western parts of Honduras and El
Salvador.
One of the most important discoveries of Maya art was in San Bartolo: a series
of murals, the oldest known so far, which Saturno found in a royal tomb in 2001
and made public last December.
"It was like discovering the Sistine Chapel if you didn't know there had been a
Renaissance," said Saturno during that presentation.
"This marks the beginning of Guatemalan art," said the minister of culture and
indigenous leader Manuel Salazar.
That discovery forced the rethinking of other studies that attributed the first
Maya paintings and hieroglyphs to the later classic period, between 550 and 900
AC.
The murals "show us that there was already a well-organised and consolidated
society that was interested in painting the origins of the world," said Salvador
López, director of the Ministry of Culture's department of Maya monuments.
The principal mural, measuring nine metres by 90 cm, depicts the birth, death
and resurrection of the god of maize, portrayed four times with different
animals, offering a blood sacrifice.
Other ruins being studied in San Bartolo include the Jabalí Group, where last
year scientists found a jade chestplate, a tomb and vessels, which are believed
to be from a king, said Urquizú.
Archaeologists are also focusing on a group of homes known as Las Plumas, Las
Ventanas pyramid, and Tigrillo Palace.
Urquizú said the excavations will continue. "If this site exists with such rich
murals, there must be more like them in other parts," she said.
NASA, which has been providing satellite images to the project since 2003,
announced Feb. 17 it will continue as part of the effort to find more Maya
ruins.
Furthermore, the scientists hope to uncover the reasons for the demise of the
Maya, who lived in this area until the 9th century. It is thought that drought
and deforestation led to their disappearance.
(*Jorge Grochembake is a Tierramérica contributor. Originally published Feb. 24
by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network.
Tierramérica is a specialised news service produced by IPS with the backing of
the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Environment
Programme.)
(END/2006)
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