Posted on 11/20/2007 7:20:23 AM PST by 3AngelaD
ping!
Just where do archaeologists come up with these fairy tales?
This attributing motives is sheer speculation, not science.
Maybe there was more big game killed because they kill people and nobody wanted man eating carnivores in their backyards.
Gotta love how the author is channeling the thoughts of the Mayas.
So, elites are not people. I always knew that..............
Well, she does say it is a hypothesis, which means it is her theory of an explanation, not a statement of fact. Significant difference.
There might be other source material factored on but not mentioned. (I don’t think the Mayans kept a written history, but encounters with other peoples might have been preserved in those peoples’ historical tradition.) Or this might be an anthropologist way out in left field.
They have to write soething in that space that says "reason for huge government grant of taxpayers money".
Trust the idiots to come up with 'over hunting" as a reason. Personally, I would say that the mayans went through a period of political change in which animal rights groups. Vegans forced laws on the people banning red meat. That's probably why they died off, or in combination with the mayans all turning gay, destroying the family structure, and just dying out because of the lack of breeding.
The Mayans kept written records, but the Spanish destroyed most of them. However, their stelae, which are carved stone monuments placed in ceremonial centers, do record some of their historical events and their rulers’ achievements, military triumphs, and their descent. See also the paintings in the temple at Bonampak.
Actually, they did. But the missionaries destroyed all but a few as "works of the devil", and nobody has managed to translate the few that remain.
“The change in hunting habits was likely prompted by deforestation and a drier climate, which shook faith in Maya rulers’ ability to provide “agricultural abundance,” Emery continues. In response to this uncertainty, rulers ordered that more large animals be killed for food, as religious offerings, and as evidence of their power and status.”
“The Maya and Conservation: Notably, the changes in hunting practices ran counter to the largely sustainable Maya conservation practices throughout their long history, Emery said.”
Drawing parallels between ancient man-made climate change, failure to maintain sustainable practices, resorting to myth-based rituals to the gods for deliverance, wiping out the trees and causing damage to their whole ecosphere.
Warnings written in bone.
Repent now, before it is too late.
Would it have been okay for woman to have eaten a carrot?
They are being translated. David Stuart at Harvard, who started when he was a child, Yuri V. Knorosov, Linda Schele from UT, Tatiana Proskouriakoff and numerous others have made huge strides in deciphering Maya hieroglyphs, which can now be read coherently.
marked to read later
Good to hear that. It's been a few years since I last "read up" on the Maya.
I wonder if they have considered the obvious. If the Maya were willing to keep and care for people they would sacrifice, why wouldn’t they do that with animals?
They were skilled enough engineers to build enormous flat slabs of ground limestone concrete to build their temples on, and large artificial lakes lined with that same concrete. So how hard would it be to build pens or cages to raise sacred animals?
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Thanks 3AngelaD. Could have sworn we'd posted this somewhere, but this is the first! |
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Approximately the same time as Forest Law in England.
As the climate changed and their empire declined, I’d bet Their rituals called for even bigger declines in the “long pig” via sacrifice.
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