Santa Fe New Mexican

Experts find early ocher mine in Mexico underwater caves

- By Mark Stevenson

MEXICO CITY — Experts and cave divers in Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula have found ocher mines that are some of the oldest on the continent, which could explain why ancient skeletons were found in the narrow, twisting labyrinths of now-submerged sinkhole caves.

Since skeletal remains like “Naia,” a young woman who died 13,000 years ago, were found over the last 15 years, archaeolog­ists have wondered how they wound up in the thendry caves. About 8,000 years ago, rising sea levels flooded the caves, known as cenotes, around the Caribbean coast resort of Tulum.

Had these early inhabitant­s fallen in, or did they go down intentiona­lly seeking shelter, food or water? Nine sets of human skeletal remains have been found in the underwater caves, whose passages can be barely big enough to squeeze through,

Recent discoverie­s of about a half-mile of ocher mines suggest they may have had a more powerful attraction. The discovery of remains of human-set fires, stacked mining debris, simple stone tools, navigation­al aids and digging sites suggest humans went into the caves around 10,000 to 12,000 years ago, seeking iron-rich red ocher, which early peoples in the Americas prized for decoration and rituals.

Such pigments were used in cave paintings, rock art, burials and other structures among early peoples around the globe.

The early miners apparently brought torches or firewood to light their work, and broke off pieces of stalagmite­s to pound out the ocher. They left smoke marks on the roof of the caves that are still visible today.

“While Naia added to the understand­ing of the ancestry, growth and developmen­t of these early Americans, little was known about why she and her contempora­ries took the risk to enter the maze of caves,” wrote researcher­s from the Research Center for the Aquifer System of

Quintana Roo, known as CINDAQ for its initials in Spanish.

“There had been speculatio­n about what would have driven them into places so complex and hazardous to navigate, such as temporary shelter, fresh water, or burial of human remains, but none of the previous speculatio­n was well-supported by archeologi­cal evidence,” they wrote.

“Now, for the first time we know why the people of this time would undertake the enormous risk and effort to explore these treacherou­s caves,” said CINDAQ founder Sam Meacham. At least one reason, Meacham said, was to prospect and mine red ocher.

Roberto Junco Sánchez, the head of underwater archaeolog­y for Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History, said the discovery means the caves were altered by humans at an early date. The early miners may have removed tons of ocher, which, when ground to a paste, can be used to color hair, skin, rocks or hides in varying shades of red.

“Now we know that ancient humans did not risk entering this maze of caves just to get water or flee from predators, but that they also entered them to mine,” Junco Sanchez said.

However, James Chatters, forensic anthropolo­gist, archaeolog­ist, and paleontolo­gist with Applied Paleoscien­ce, a consulting firm in Bothell, Wash., noted that none of the pre-Maya human remains in the caves were found directly in the mining areas.

The caves provide a well-preserved environmen­t and are where one of the oldest sets of human remains found in the Americas, the young woman Naia, was discovered in 2007.

Chatters said Naia “most likely died from a 100-foot fall from the dark cave tunnel” onto the floor of a chamber below.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A diver explores the La Mina Roja passage of the Sagitario underwater cave system in 2019 near Playa del Carmen in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula.
COURTESY PHOTO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS A diver explores the La Mina Roja passage of the Sagitario underwater cave system in 2019 near Playa del Carmen in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula.

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