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Keyword: tlaloc

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  • [Mexico] National Guard, police dispatched to protect archaeological site: Construction at Teotihuacan has caused 'irreparable damage,' say officials

    06/05/2021 8:39:00 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 17 replies
    Mexico News Daily ^ | Tuesday, June 1, 2021 | unattributed
    The National Guard and Federal Police were dispatched Monday to an outlying section of the Teotihuacán archaeological site to seize land where illegal construction work has continued in recent months despite stop-work orders.The National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) and the Ministry of Culture said 250 National Guard troops and 60 agents of the Attorney General’s Office participated in an operation to seize two parcels of land in Oztoyahualco, an area of the México state site that is known as the “old city” because it is believed that the Teotihuacán settlement began there.In March, INAH suspended projects being built...
  • Below a pyramid, a treasure trove sheds new light on ancient Mexican rites

    09/02/2021 5:32:46 AM PDT · by BenLurkin · 15 replies
    Rueters ^ | David Alire Garcia
    The volume and variety of objects hidden in the sealed tunnel under Teotihuacan's ornate Feathered Serpent Pyramid has shattered records for discoveries at the ancient city, once the most populous metropolis of the Americas and now a top tourist draw just outside modern-day Mexico City. ...100,000 artifacts from the tunnel have been cataloged so far, ranging from finely-carved statues, jewelry, shells, and ceramics as well as thousands of wooden and metallic objects that mostly survived the passage of time intact. ...100-meter-long (330 ft) tunnel, which ended in three chambers directly under the pyramid's mid-point. ...which is tall enough in most...
  • 2,000-year-old flower offerings found under Teotihuacan pyramid in Mexico ... The bouquets had survived a bonfire.

    08/24/2021 11:37:38 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 9 replies
    https://www.livescience.com ^ | AUGUST 24, 2021 | By Owen Jarus
    Nearly 2,000 years ago, the ancient people of Teotihuacan wrapped bunches of flowers into beautiful bouquets, laid them beneath a jumble of wood and set the pile ablaze. Now, archaeologists have found the remains of those surprisingly well-preserved flowers in a tunnel snaking beneath a pyramid of the ancient city, located northeast of what is now Mexico City. The pyramid itself is immense, and would have stood 75 feet (23 meters) tall when it was first built, making it taller than the Sphinx of Giza from ancient Egypt. The Teotihuacan pyramid is part of the "Temple of the Feathered Serpent,"...
  • Lost cave of 'Jaguar God' rediscovered below Mayan Ruins — and it's full of treasure

    03/08/2019 6:30:34 AM PST · by ETL · 22 replies
    FoxNews.com ^ | Mar 8, 2019 | Brandon Specktor Senior Writer | LiveScience
    Shimmying through a maze of dark tunnels below the Mayan ruins of Chichén Itzá on Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula, archaeologists have rediscovered a long-sealed cave brimming with lost treasure. According to an statement from Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), the cave is stockpiled with more than 150 artifacts, including incense burners, vases, and decorative plates adorned with the faces of ancient gods and other religious icons. The trove is believed to be just one of seven sacred chambers in a network of tunnels known as Balamku — "Jaguar God" — that sits below Chichén Itzá, a city that...
  • Maya ritual cave ‘untouched’ for 1,000 years stuns archaeologists

    03/05/2019 10:05:25 AM PST · by BenLurkin · 32 replies
    National Geographic ^ | 03/04/2019 | Gena Steffans
    To access just the first of seven ritual offering chambers identified so far within Balamku, archaeologists must crawl flat on their stomachs through hundreds of feet of tortuously narrow passages. In the original report on the cave (recently located by archaeologist and GAM investigator James Brady of California State University, Los Angeles), Segovia identified 155 artifacts, some with faces of Toltec rain god Tláloc, and others with markings of the sacred ceiba tree, a potent representation of the Maya universe. In comparison, the nearby cave of Balankanché, a ritual site excavated in 1959, contains just 70 of these objects. “Balamku...