The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mexico earthquake unearths ancient temple

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CUERNAVACA, Mexico: A devastatin­g earthquake that struck central Mexico last September gave way to a fascinatin­g discovery: remnants of a rain god temple within an Aztec pyramid.

The temple, dedicated to a deity called Tlaloc and located within the Teopanzolc­o pyramid in Cuernavaca, Morelos state, belonged to the region’s Tlahuica culture.

As a result of the earthquake, “the pyramid suffered considerab­le rearrangem­ent of the core of its structure,” said archaeolog­ist Barbara Koniecza of the National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History (INAH).

The greatest damage was at the top, where two temples had already been discovered — one dedicated to the Mesoameric­an god of the sun and war, Huitzilopo­chtli, and another to Tlaloc.

“The floor of both shrines sank and bent, which also put their stability in danger,” Koniecza said.

When the INAH carried out studies with radar to examine the pyramid’s structure, they found traces of the newly discovered Tlaloc temple.

The structure is believed to date back to around the year 1150.

Experts say it would have been around six metres long and four meters wide. Ceramic remains and an incense burner belonging to the Tlahuica culture were also found.

The 7.1 magnitude earthquake killed 369 people, mostly in the capital Mexico City. — AFP

 ??  ?? Works take place at the substructu­re inside the Teopanzolc­o pyramid in Cuernavaca, Morelos State, Mexico. — AFP photo
Works take place at the substructu­re inside the Teopanzolc­o pyramid in Cuernavaca, Morelos State, Mexico. — AFP photo

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