Imperial Valley Press

Mexico ‘crime scene’ skulls turn out to be from A.D. 900

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MEXICO CITY ( AP) — When Mexican police found a pile of about 150 skulls in a cave near the Guatemalan border, they thought they were looking at a crime scene, and took the bones to the state capital.

It turns out it was a very cold case.

It took a decade of tests and analysis to determine the skulls were from sacrificia­l victims killed between A.D. 900 and 1200, the National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History said Wednesday.

“Believing they were looking at a crime scene, investigat­ors collected the bones and started examining them in Tuxtla Gutierrez,” the state capital, the institute, known as INAH, said in a statement.

The police in 2012 weren’t being stupid; the border area around the town of Frontera Comalapa in southern Chiapas state has long been plagued by violence and immigrant traffickin­g. And pre- Hispanic skull piles in Mexico usually show a hole bashed through each side of every skull, and were usually found in ceremonial plazas, not caves.

Bu t experts said Wednesday the victims in the cave had probably been ritually decapitate­d and the skulls put on display on a kind of trophy rack known as a “tzompantli.” Spanish conquistad­ores wrote about seeing such racks in the 1520s, and some Spaniards’ heads even wound up on them.

While usually strung on wooden poles using holes bashed through them — the common practice among the Aztecs and other cultures — experts say the cave skulls may have rested atop poles, rather than being strung on them.

Interestin­gly, there were more females than males among the victims, and none of them had any teeth.

In light of the cave experience, archaeolog­ist Javier Montes de Paz said people should probably call archaeolog­ists, not police.

“When people find something that could be in an archaeolog­ical context, don’t touch it and notify local authoritie­s or directly the INAH,” he said.

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