Lost Maya City Discovered in Mexico
June 24, 2013
Pyramids, palaces, ball courts, and houses from an ancient Maya city overgrown by centuries of thick jungle vegetation have been discovered in a remote area of southeastern Mexico by scientists from Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History. Occupied from about A.D. 600 until 900, the city has been newly renamed Chactun. The scientists reported that the city, which covered about 54 acres (22 hectares), is the first ancient Maya complex found in a now heavily forested area of Campeche province in the western Yucatán Peninsula. Also found at the site were plazas and altars as well as stone monuments called stelae. The name “K’inch B’ahlam,” which may refer to one of the city’s rulers, was carved on one stele.
The scientists discovered Chactun while examining aerial photographs of the area. Visiting the site required hacking their way along paths once used by loggers and workers who tapped the area’s rubber trees.
The Maya civilization reached its peak from about A.D. 250 to 900. During that time, known as the Classic Period, it was centered in the tropical rain forest of the lowlands of what is now northern Guatemala. By about 900, most of the Maya abandoned the lowlands and moved to areas to the north and south, including Yucatán and the highlands of southern Guatemala. In those areas, they continued to prosper until Spain conquered almost all of the Maya in the mid-1500′s. Scholars are still trying to discover the reasons for the collapse of Classic Maya society in the lowlands. Some experts point to a combination of such factors as overpopulation, disease, exhaustion of natural resources, crop failures, warfare between cities, and the movement of other groups into the Maya area.
In a study published in November 2012, a research team headed by environmental archaeologist Douglas Kennett of Pennsylvania State University concluded that a 100-year drought played a major role in the collapse of the Classic Maya society. The drought, which plagued the lowlands from 1020 to 1100, had followed a drying period that began in about 660. According to Kennett, Maya writings from this period link the drought to widespread famine, disease, and wars, among other disruptive events.
Additional World Book article include:
- Chichén Itzá
- Copán
- Mexico (History of)
- The Ancient Maya: Deciphering New Clues (a special report)
- Archaeology (1924) (a Back in Time article)